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> The Cartels have substantially more power than the state.

This is a common misconception. The state can absolutely dominate any cartel in Mexico, they just choose not to for political reasons.

> relearning their ancient languages that were nearly destroyed by their colonizers

Nahuatl is actually a colonizer language. The Aztecs brutally subjugated other native peoples, so brutally in fact that those groups were extremely eager to ally with the Spanish to overthrow the Aztec empire.


A non-trivial portion of my consulting work over the past 10 years has been working on data pipelines at various big corporations that move absurdly small amounts of data around using big data tools like spark. I would not worry about purchasing services from Databricks, but I would definitely try to poach their sales people if you can.

Just curious, what would you consider, "absurdly small amounts of data around using big data tools like spark" and what do you recommend instead?

I recently worked on some data pipelines with Databricks notebooks ala Azure Fabric. I'm currently using ~30% of our capacity and starting to get pushback to run things less frequently to reduce the load.

I'm not convinced I actually need Fabric here, but the value for me has been its the first time the company has been able to provision a platform that can handle the data at all. I have a small portion of it running into a datbase as well which has been constant complaints about volume.

At this point I can't tell if we just have unrealistic expectations about the costs of having this data that everyone wants, or if our data engineers are just completely out of touch with the current state of the industry, so Fabric is just the cost we have to pay to keep up.


One financial services company has hundreds of Glue jobs that are using pyspark to read and write less than 4GB of data per run. These jobs run every day.

I'm aware of a govt agency with a few hundred gb of data using Mongo, Databricks and were being pushed towards Snowflake as well. Boggles the mind.

I used to do similar work. Back in the day I used 25 TB as the cut off point for single node design. It’s certainly larger now.

Which is also a reason to not use Databricks, as they will cost your company money by selling gullible users things they don’t need.

Are you referring to Air Marshal Fufu? The wiki article does not disappoint.


I'm giving you an upvote because I am 51% sure that was just good trolling.


I was half joking and making a reference to his silly small government comment but I do absolutely believe in nationalizing the tits out of everything. My dream is to walk into a grocery store and everything is the best it can be, with identical labelling, no marketing, and all the information I want about it. "SALT". "WATER". Any positive iteration should lead to reward and absorption by my fictional state. I've probably read too much sci fi.


Why would anything there be ‘the best it can be’ in that scenario?


can linux kernel code be 'the best it can be'?


because people are allowed to fix their own issues, and also allowed to put their name on their work in the public eye.

neither, generally, would be possible in the scenario you describe.


please note that I am not OP.

How about 'generic' drugs? are they the best 'manufactured' they can be?


Generally?

No. But will meet regulatory minimums insofar as active ingredients, purity, etc.

They don’t have a monopoly like the OP described, however. If they did? Yikes…

Notably, that kind of economy is roughly how the USSR ran, and no one praised it when it died.


This seems likely, but I cannot figure out why they are not trying to pass more legislation in the first 2 years if they're fairly sure they're going to lose the midterms.

The only conclusion that can be drawn from their public actions is that they believe they can more or less enforce all their policies by executive order and that they're very sure they will be keeping the executive in 2028.


I've actually used all 3 of them and didn't find any of them to be very easy to work with. As a developer, I do enjoy being able to go down to the markup level when I need to, but these platforms seem designed to keep you separated from that as much as possible.


Not opposed to code if that’s what you fancy, from a use case perspective, my suggestions optimize for time to market. Click it, ship it, ship code for product.


I find webflow to be a close approximation to the markup. Unlike other platforms, webflow exposes the underlying markdown from the get go


It is not just fashionable, it is downright easy due to his personality. His methods of communication on many topics, particularly political ones, are purposefully misleading and manipulative.

But he is 100% correct about the need to become an interplanetary species. On a long enough timeline, it's the only option to keep our future selves in existence. While I'd certainly prefer to have some wholesome, highly decorated astronaut with an honest streak and a perfect temperament be the one who started SpaceX and enabled multi-planetary travel, I still believe it's better that Musk is doing it than no one at all.


If you're upset about the deterioration of rule of law under Trump, I have some bad news for you about Mexico.


I'm not sure what point you're trying to make. Also, there one US embassy in Mexico, and multiple local consulates.


Average software dev salaries in major Mexican metros are around 30,000 to 45,000 MXN per month. So around $2,000 USD a month.


Which is a lot, at least in terms or how much you can buy. Mexico is really cheap, compared to USA.


The thing with purchasing power is that it doesn't apply to everything. In particular foreign goods.

So while low cost of living countries offset their low wages with cheaper housing, food and local services, imported stuff still costs the same and is relatively expensive as a result. Basically in those countries it really sucks to buy a computer, camera, even cars.


I spent two weeks in Juarez a few years ago for my wife's visa stuff. The hotel was pretty cheap, the food was pretty cheap (and delicious!), but I was surprised to see that an Xbox was actually more expensive than it was in NYC.

It makes enough sense, Microsoft isn't a charity, they're selling the console at a fairly competitive price already in the US, it's not going going to magically get cheaper just because it crossed a border, but it was still surprising to see that.


Microsoft also knows that if they sell xbox's for less overseas people will start buying those cheap ones and importing them to the US for resale.


That makes sense, and not really theoretical; it's pretty easy to buy Blu-rays and DVDs from foreign markets, and they're often considerably cheaper than their American versions.

They of course are region encoded, but I suspect nearly anyone who frequents Hacker News knows how to get around that.


It is a hit on your retirement savings if you intend to return to a more expensive country.


The only thing that makes it "a lot" is how pathetic the wages are in Mexico compared to it. But you aren't living large in Guadalajara on $20k/year.

Only some things are particularly cheap in Mexico like labor and anything where labor is the main input, like services.

And some things that you'd think would be in reach of a Mexican software developer, like sending your kids to a decent private school, are not.


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