• =?UTF-8?Q?=E2=80=9CThis_is_how_the_war_against_the_machines_begins?= =?UTF-8?B?4oCdOg==?=

    From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Mon Dec 22 17:17:41 2025
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Tue Dec 23 19:48:00 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/22/2025 5:17 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    rCLThis is how the war against the machines beginsrCY:

    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/ AVvXsEjWqK3Ac7LcwhoPWhl6Oq2HiQzqdjpDBVlZFUVRAIRzc2ruKDJD99zr8aoRWGoZ2FUpbPTRuMfYsTD2VBglaNIRr4ID6CUfgblxVrREs0HlMykD5XbGDvpOqoIn6mZh60cvOTuGw_roups7wzd32RdumToZxAWDSPcNi_Jh1PBRroGQaTPmw7VTPr0273c/s550/Meme%20-%20roomba%20Cheetoh.png

    From:

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2025/12/memes-that-made-me- laugh-291.html

    Lynn

    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/20/roomba-bankruptcy-robot-vacuum-maker.html

    rCLProduct quality was one of the advantages for the Roomba in a flood of
    less expensive knock-offs, but that didnrCOt save it from the corporate bankruptcy its maker iRobot announced earlier this week. And cheap
    Chinese competition was not the only factor in its failure. An attempted
    2022 acquisition of iRobot by Amazon, thwarted by regulators, and the
    changing dynamics around mergers and acquisitions, represent an ongoing concern for struggling tech companies that in the past have turned to
    M&A as not just an exit ramp, but savior.rCY

    rCLThe company, which Amazon agreed to pay $1.7 billion to acquire in
    August 2022, reported in a court filing last Sunday that it had between
    $100 million-$500 million in assets and liabilities, and owed roughly
    $100 million to its largest creditor, Shenzhen Picea Robotics Co., the contract manufacturer, located in China and Vietnam, which now owns it.
    In all, Reuters reported the company has $190 million in debt.rCY

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Wed Dec 24 17:12:23 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 2025-12-24 01:48:00 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/22/2025 5:17 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    rCLThis is how the war against the machines beginsrCY:

    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/
    AVvXsEjWqK3Ac7LcwhoPWhl6Oq2HiQzqdjpDBVlZFUVRAIRzc2ruKDJD99zr8aoRWGoZ2FUpbPTRuMfYsTD2VBglaNIRr4ID6CUfgblxVrREs0HlMykD5XbGDvpOqoIn6mZh60cvOTuGw_roups7wzd32RdumToZxAWDSPcNi_Jh1PBRroGQaTPmw7VTPr0273c/s550/Meme%20-%20roomba%20Cheetoh.png


    From:

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2025/12/memes-that-made-me-
    laugh-291.html

    Lynn

    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a
    lot more than one robot vacuum makerrCY
    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/20/roomba-bankruptcy-robot-vacuum-maker.html

    rCLProduct quality was one of the advantages for the Roomba in a flood
    of less expensive knock-offs, but that didnrCOt save it from the
    corporate bankruptcy its maker iRobot announced earlier this week. And
    cheap Chinese competition was not the only factor in its failure. An attempted 2022 acquisition of iRobot by Amazon, thwarted by regulators,
    and the changing dynamics around mergers and acquisitions, represent an ongoing concern for struggling tech companies that in the past have
    turned to M&A as not just an exit ramp, but savior.rCY

    rCLThe company, which Amazon agreed to pay $1.7 billion to acquire in
    August 2022, reported in a court filing last Sunday that it had between
    $100 million-$500 million in assets and liabilities, and owed roughly
    $100 million to its largest creditor, Shenzhen Picea Robotics Co., the contract manufacturer, located in China and Vietnam, which now owns it.
    In all, Reuters reported the company has $190 million in debt.rCY

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Lynn

    Killed because robot vacuum cleaners (and robot lawn mowers, and robot
    mops) are useless, gimmicky devices that unsurprisingly never lived up
    to the hype.



    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Wed Dec 24 15:36:19 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/23/2025 10:12 PM, Your Name wrote:
    On 2025-12-24 01:48:00 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/22/2025 5:17 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    |ore4+oThis is how the war against the machines begins|ore4-Y:

    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/
    AVvXsEjWqK3Ac7LcwhoPWhl6Oq2HiQzqdjpDBVlZFUVRAIRzc2ruKDJD99zr8aoRWGoZ2FUpbPTRuMfYsTD2VBglaNIRr4ID6CUfgblxVrREs0HlMykD5XbGDvpOqoIn6mZh60cvOTuGw_roups7wzd32RdumToZxAWDSPcNi_Jh1PBRroGQaTPmw7VTPr0273c/s550/Meme%20-%20roomba%20Cheetoh.png

    From:

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2025/12/memes-that-made-me-
    laugh-291.html

    Lynn

    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy.-a |ore4+oRoomba|ore4raos bankruptcy may wreck
    a lot more than one robot vacuum maker|ore4-Y
    -a https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/20/roomba-bankruptcy-robot-vacuum-
    maker.html

    |ore4+oProduct quality was one of the advantages for the Roomba in a flood >> of less expensive knock-offs, but that didn|ore4raot save it from the
    corporate bankruptcy its maker iRobot announced earlier this week. And
    cheap Chinese competition was not the only factor in its failure. An
    attempted 2022 acquisition of iRobot by Amazon, thwarted by
    regulators, and the changing dynamics around mergers and acquisitions,
    represent an ongoing concern for struggling tech companies that in the
    past have turned to M&A as not just an exit ramp, but savior.|ore4-Y

    |ore4+oThe company, which Amazon agreed to pay $1.7 billion to acquire in >> August 2022, reported in a court filing last Sunday that it had
    between $100 million-$500 million in assets and liabilities, and owed
    roughly $100 million to its largest creditor, Shenzhen Picea Robotics
    Co., the contract manufacturer, located in China and Vietnam, which
    now owns it. In all, Reuters reported the company has $190 million in
    debt.|ore4-Y

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing
    line.

    Lynn

    Killed because robot vacuum cleaners (and robot lawn mowers, and robot
    mops) are useless, gimmicky devices that unsurprisingly never lived up
    to the hype.

    It is my understanding that the various robot vacuum cleaners are
    experts at tracking animal fecal matter and other greasy sticky
    semi-solid substances around their domiciles.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Thomas Koenig@tkoenig@netcologne.de to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Thu Dec 25 09:38:18 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.
    --
    This USENET posting was made without artificial intelligence,
    artificial impertinence, artificial arrogance, artificial stupidity,
    artificial flavorings or artificial colorants.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Thu Dec 25 15:37:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot >> more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started
    a decade ago.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Thomas Koenig@tkoenig@netcologne.de to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Thu Dec 25 21:41:18 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot >>> more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line. >>
    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started
    a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.
    --
    This USENET posting was made without artificial intelligence,
    artificial impertinence, artificial arrogance, artificial stupidity,
    artificial flavorings or artificial colorants.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Thu Dec 25 18:16:08 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot
    more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started
    a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago. Amazon tried to
    buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from happening.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Joy Beeson@jbeeson@invalid.net.invalid to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Thu Dec 25 19:49:35 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Wed, 24 Dec 2025 17:12:23 +1300, Your Name
    <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:

    Killed because robot vacuum cleaners (and robot lawn mowers, and robot
    mops) are useless, gimmicky devices that unsurprisingly never lived up
    to the hype.

    Our Roomba worked quite well, and probably still would if we
    dug it out of storage. An upright vaccuum cleaner is much
    faster, but you can operate a Roomba while sitting in a lift
    chair, and you don't have to move the furniture.

    When we had to hire our vaccuuming done, we bought an
    upright.
    --
    Joy Beeson
    joy beeson at centurylink dot net
    http://wlweather.net/PAGEJOY/

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Thomas Koenig@tkoenig@netcologne.de to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 09:25:06 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot
    more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started >>> a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago. Amazon tried to
    buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from happening.

    And the tarrifs broke the company's back. This is also mentioned
    in the article that you quoted, by the way.
    --
    This USENET posting was made without artificial intelligence,
    artificial impertinence, artificial arrogance, artificial stupidity,
    artificial flavorings or artificial colorants.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kludge@kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 08:48:17 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Thomas Koenig <tkoenig@netcologne.de> wrote:
    And the tarrifs broke the company's back. This is also mentioned
    in the article that you quoted, by the way.

    Vietnam tariffs on electronics aren't quite as bad.

    I make a thing that uses a switch. The switch costs $3.10 each from China,
    now with a $1.10 tariff added. (These are Q1000 prices since I am just a small operation.)

    I went looking for an equivalent... and a company in Vietnam makes a similar product, and switches from Vietnam are not tariffed at all, but they are almost $9 each which is a problem, and I don't think the quality is as good
    as the Chinese ones.

    Likewise board fab in China is now being tariffed at a pretty high rate (to
    the point where the big prototype board company JLC is no longer accepting orders from the US because they don't want to be bothered with the customs mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is kind of an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is
    waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste
    into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane
    disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.

    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out
    of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it
    doing anything other than hurting customers right now.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Mad Hamish@newsunspammelaws@iinet.unspamme.net.au to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sat Dec 27 03:15:31 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Thu, 25 Dec 2025 18:16:08 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. oRoombaAs bankruptcy may wreck a lot >>>>> more than one robot vacuum makero

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started >>> a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago. Amazon tried to
    buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from happening.

    The article you linked said that the purchase was abandoned with the
    EU regulators were looking to block it
    Biden was not a member of the EU government
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 08:44:36 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 08:48:17 -0500 (EST), kludge@panix.com (Scott
    Dorsey) wrote:
    Thomas Koenig <tkoenig@netcologne.de> wrote:
    And the tarrifs broke the company's back. This is also mentioned
    in the article that you quoted, by the way.

    Vietnam tariffs on electronics aren't quite as bad.

    I make a thing that uses a switch. The switch costs $3.10 each from China, >now with a $1.10 tariff added. (These are Q1000 prices since I am just a small
    operation.)

    I went looking for an equivalent... and a company in Vietnam makes a similar >product, and switches from Vietnam are not tariffed at all, but they are >almost $9 each which is a problem, and I don't think the quality is as good >as the Chinese ones.

    Likewise board fab in China is now being tariffed at a pretty high rate (to >the point where the big prototype board company JLC is no longer accepting >orders from the US because they don't want to be bothered with the customs >mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is kind of >an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is >waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste
    into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane >disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.
    Just thought I should point out that those "sane disposal laws" are
    /exactly/ the sort of thing rabid idealizers of unfettered capitalism
    oppose.
    Well, they would be putting them in the nearest river, if possible.
    Raw, unfettered, capitalism is, indeed, a bitch.
    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out
    of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it >doing anything other than hurting customers right now.
    If by "customers" you mean people in your situation (and you are,
    indeed, a customer), that's fine.
    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".
    Nor am I seeing any riots on this topic on true-red MAGA streets.
    Which I would expect if they were causing severe heartburn.
    Or anything like that. When I do find articles on the topic, they are
    usually some Great Expert assuring us that they are a problem.
    I, myself, am basically unaffected. Of course, some prices rise from
    time to time. But they have done so my entire life (a candy bar
    costing 5-cents now costs -- well, I don't know how much; I stopped
    buying them when I retired they were at $1.20 but that's over 50 years
    or so). What I am /not/ seeing is a sudden across-the-board 10% jump.
    And my expenditures are still within what passes for me as the
    expected amount.
    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck
    drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Bobbie Sellers@bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 12:30:07 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written



    On 12/26/25 08:44, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 08:48:17 -0500 (EST), kludge@panix.com (Scott
    Dorsey) wrote:

    Thomas Koenig <tkoenig@netcologne.de> wrote:
    And the tarrifs broke the company's back. This is also mentioned
    in the article that you quoted, by the way.

    Vietnam tariffs on electronics aren't quite as bad.

    I make a thing that uses a switch. The switch costs $3.10 each from China, >> now with a $1.10 tariff added. (These are Q1000 prices since I am just a small
    operation.)

    I went looking for an equivalent... and a company in Vietnam makes a similar >> product, and switches from Vietnam are not tariffed at all, but they are
    almost $9 each which is a problem, and I don't think the quality is as good >> as the Chinese ones.

    Likewise board fab in China is now being tariffed at a pretty high rate (to >> the point where the big prototype board company JLC is no longer accepting >> orders from the US because they don't want to be bothered with the customs >> mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is kind of
    an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is
    waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste
    into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane
    disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.

    Just thought I should point out that those "sane disposal laws" are
    /exactly/ the sort of thing rabid idealizers of unfettered capitalism
    oppose.

    Well, they would be putting them in the nearest river, if possible.

    Raw, unfettered, capitalism is, indeed, a bitch.

    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out
    of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it
    doing anything other than hurting customers right now.

    If by "customers" you mean people in your situation (and you are,
    indeed, a customer), that's fine.

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".


    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.


    Nor am I seeing any riots on this topic on true-red MAGA streets.
    Which I would expect if they were causing severe heartburn.

    Oh for heartburn plenty of advertised products.
    Some people just are not smart enought to avoid foods that give
    them heartburn. I don't know if any stats would show that MAGA |
    versus Democrats would be much different.

    The only people not affected by Trumpian Inflation prices are the
    very well off folks who got Trumpian tax cuts in 2017 renewed in 2025.


    Or anything like that. When I do find articles on the topic, they are
    usually some Great Expert assuring us that they are a problem.

    I, myself, am basically unaffected. Of course, some prices rise from
    time to time. But they have done so my entire life (a candy bar
    costing 5-cents now costs -- well, I don't know how much; I stopped
    buying them when I retired they were at $1.20 but that's over 50 years
    or so). What I am /not/ seeing is a sudden across-the-board 10% jump.
    And my expenditures are still within what passes for me as the
    expected amount.

    I don't eat candy bars very often as they often contain ingredients which give me problems worse that heart burn but i eat bars that contain
    85% cocoa and they only contribute less than 80 calories/day to my
    diet and contain nothing that bothers me.


    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk
    ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the testimony of growers
    that they are not getting the workers that they need for harvest because
    the
    workers are fearful of ICE which does not apparently give a damn if the
    people
    whom they are arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    bliss

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kludge@kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 16:39:23 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Paul S Person <psperson@old.netcom.invalid> wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 08:48:17 -0500 (EST), kludge@panix.com (Scott
    Dorsey) wrote:

    mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is =
    kind of
    an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is= >=20
    waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste=20 >>into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane=20 >>disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.

    Just thought I should point out that those "sane disposal laws" are
    /exactly/ the sort of thing rabid idealizers of unfettered capitalism
    oppose.

    Yes, and this is what governments exist for... to prevent the despoiling
    of the commons.

    Right now we're still paying lots of money to clean up the waste from
    industry in Pittsburgh back in the fifties. It's much cheaper to control
    the waste today than to kick the can down the road, but since someone else
    will be paying it later down the road corporations with a short-term
    outlook don't care.

    Governments exist in part to deal with the long-term outlook.

    Raw, unfettered, capitalism is, indeed, a bitch.

    I am very much in favor of capitalism... but it is in the best interest of individual capitalists to eliminate competition and therefore eliminate capitalism itself which is dependent on competition to work. This is why
    it all collapses unless it has government support.

    I think what you mean by "raw, unfettered" is what is classically called "laissez-faire."

    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out
    of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it >>doing anything other than hurting customers right now.

    If by "customers" you mean people in your situation (and you are,
    indeed, a customer), that's fine.=20

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".=20

    It's raising the prices they have to pay at the store, and it is hurting
    them. The fact that they aren't up in arms about it is a different issue. --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dimensional Traveler@dtravel@sonic.net to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 17:31:57 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/26/2025 1:39 PM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
    Paul S Person <psperson@old.netcom.invalid> wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 08:48:17 -0500 (EST), kludge@panix.com (Scott
    Dorsey) wrote:

    mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is =
    kind of
    an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is= >> =20
    waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste=20 >>> into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane=20
    disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.

    Just thought I should point out that those "sane disposal laws" are
    /exactly/ the sort of thing rabid idealizers of unfettered capitalism
    oppose.

    Yes, and this is what governments exist for... to prevent the despoiling
    of the commons.

    Right now we're still paying lots of money to clean up the waste from industry in Pittsburgh back in the fifties. It's much cheaper to control
    the waste today than to kick the can down the road, but since someone else will be paying it later down the road corporations with a short-term
    outlook don't care.

    Governments exist in part to deal with the long-term outlook.

    Raw, unfettered, capitalism is, indeed, a bitch.

    I am very much in favor of capitalism... but it is in the best interest of individual capitalists to eliminate competition and therefore eliminate capitalism itself which is dependent on competition to work. This is why
    it all collapses unless it has government support.

    I think what you mean by "raw, unfettered" is what is classically called "laissez-faire."

    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out
    of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it >>> doing anything other than hurting customers right now.

    If by "customers" you mean people in your situation (and you are,
    indeed, a customer), that's fine.=20

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".=20

    It's raising the prices they have to pay at the store, and it is hurting them. The fact that they aren't up in arms about it is a different issue.

    Largely because they think that they will actually be allowed to vote
    for someone OTHER than Trump in 2028. (Or whichever of his successors survives the knives if Trump dies before then.)
    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Chris Thompson@the_thompsons@earthlink.net to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sat Dec 27 00:24:41 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Mad Hamish wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Dec 2025 18:16:08 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot
    more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025. The Chinese knockoffs started >>>> a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago. Amazon tried to
    buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from happening. >>
    The article you linked said that the purchase was abandoned with the
    EU regulators were looking to block it
    Biden was not a member of the EU government


    Ha. Biden wasn't a _public_ member of the EU government. But Hillary's
    emails from Hunter's laptop conclusively prove- PROVE, I SAY- that
    George Soros' paid demonstrators released the chemtrails over Area 51
    that activated the Jewish Space Lasers that Joe Biden used to give the
    orders to ANTIFA operatives from the pizza parlor basement to mindwipe
    the EU economic ministers.

    SO THERE.

    Every Trumper knows this stuff. It's like, you know, third grade to them.

    Chris

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dimensional Traveler@dtravel@sonic.net to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Fri Dec 26 22:14:21 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/26/2025 9:24 PM, Chris Thompson wrote:
    Mad Hamish wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Dec 2025 18:16:08 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:


    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy.-a rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck >>>>>>> a lot
    more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same
    manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025.-a The Chinese knockoffs
    started
    a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago.-a Amazon tried to
    buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from
    happening.

    The article you linked said that the purchase was abandoned with the
    EU regulators were looking to block it
    Biden was not a member of the EU government


    Ha. Biden wasn't a _public_ member of the EU government. But Hillary's emails from Hunter's laptop conclusively prove- PROVE, I SAY- that
    George Soros' paid demonstrators released the chemtrails over Area 51
    that activated the Jewish Space Lasers that Joe Biden used to give the orders to ANTIFA operatives from the pizza parlor basement to mindwipe
    the EU economic ministers.

    SO THERE.

    Every Trumper knows this stuff. It's like, you know, third grade to them.

    Isn't third grade the MAGA equivalent of a doctorate? :P
    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sat Dec 27 19:38:11 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 2025-12-27 06:14:21 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/26/2025 9:24 PM, Chris Thompson wrote:
    Mad Hamish wrote:
    On Thu, 25 Dec 2025 18:16:08 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 12/25/2025 3:41 PM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:
    On 12/25/2025 3:38 AM, Thomas Koenig wrote:
    Lynn McGuire <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> schrieb:

    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy.-a rCLRoombarCOs bankruptcy may wreck a lot
    more than one robot vacuum makerrCY

    [...]

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Plus tariffs on imports from Vietnam.

    The tariffs just started this year, 2025.-a The Chinese knockoffs >>>>>> started a decade ago.

    IRobot's bancrupcy was in 2025, not a decade ago.

    The financial problems started quite a few years ago.-a Amazon tried to >>>> buy IRobot a few years ago and Biden's government kept that from happening.

    The article you linked said that the purchase was abandoned with the
    EU regulators were looking to block it Biden was not a member of the EU >>> government

    Ha. Biden wasn't a _public_ member of the EU government. But Hillary's
    emails from Hunter's laptop conclusively prove- PROVE, I SAY- that
    George Soros' paid demonstrators released the chemtrails over Area 51
    that activated the Jewish Space Lasers that Joe Biden used to give the
    orders to ANTIFA operatives from the pizza parlor basement to mindwipe
    the EU economic ministers.

    SO THERE.

    Every Trumper knows this stuff. It's like, you know, third grade to them.

    Isn't third grade the MAGA equivalent of a doctorate? :P

    MAGA nutters can't even manage to graduate from pre-school. :-\



    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sat Dec 27 08:35:18 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:
    <snippo mucho>
    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.
    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.
    Speaking of sheeple ...
    <snippo more-o>
    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck
    drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk
    ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the testimony of growers
    that they are not getting the workers that they need for harvest because
    the
    workers are fearful of ICE which does not apparently give a damn if the >people
    whom they are arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green >cards.
    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sat Dec 27 08:45:01 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 17:31:57 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/26/2025 1:39 PM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
    Paul S Person <psperson@old.netcom.invalid> wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 08:48:17 -0500 (EST), kludge@panix.com (Scott
    Dorsey) wrote:

    mess), but there's no tariff on board fab from Vietnam. Board fab is = >>> kind of
    an odd duck since most of the cost of board fab in the US and Vietnam is= >>> =20
    waste disposal, while in China they just drop all the heavy metal waste=20 >>>> into a sump in the basement. So it's very hard for anyone with sane=20 >>>> disposal laws to compete with the Chinese.

    Just thought I should point out that those "sane disposal laws" are
    /exactly/ the sort of thing rabid idealizers of unfettered capitalism
    oppose.

    Yes, and this is what governments exist for... to prevent the despoiling
    of the commons.

    Right now we're still paying lots of money to clean up the waste from
    industry in Pittsburgh back in the fifties. It's much cheaper to control
    the waste today than to kick the can down the road, but since someone else >> will be paying it later down the road corporations with a short-term
    outlook don't care.

    Governments exist in part to deal with the long-term outlook.

    Raw, unfettered, capitalism is, indeed, a bitch.

    I am very much in favor of capitalism... but it is in the best interest of >> individual capitalists to eliminate competition and therefore eliminate
    capitalism itself which is dependent on competition to work. This is why
    it all collapses unless it has government support.

    I think what you mean by "raw, unfettered" is what is classically called
    "laissez-faire."

    So, I do see some of these tariffs possibly pushing some production out >>>> of China and into Vietnam and Thailand in the future, but I don't see it >>>> doing anything other than hurting customers right now.

    If by "customers" you mean people in your situation (and you are,
    indeed, a customer), that's fine.=20

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".=20

    It's raising the prices they have to pay at the store, and it is hurting
    them. The fact that they aren't up in arms about it is a different issue.

    Largely because they think that they will actually be allowed to vote
    for someone OTHER than Trump in 2028. (Or whichever of his successors >survives the knives if Trump dies before then.)
    Except for the true-red MAGAs, of course.
    And those MAGA-sheeple who are upset but blame Soros.
    The Republican Party can still survive, if it impeaches/convicts/bars
    from future office Trump (the latter two will require as assist from a
    few Democratic Senators) and hope that Vance can repair enough of the
    damage done to satisfy enough voters.
    In the unlikely event that the Republicans are smart enough to do
    this, I would suggest Vance give the DOinJ, the DHinS in general and
    ICE in particular a really good wedgie [1] to get them back on track.
    They don't have much time. Things would probably need to be clearly
    turning around by June, and the wedgies finished by September.
    [1] As ATF is said to have gotten after Ruby Ridge and Waco. It is my
    believe that /every/ gummint agency could do with a good wedgie from
    time to time.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sat Dec 27 14:55:16 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck
    drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk
    ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the testimony of growers
    that they are not getting the workers that they need for harvest because
    the
    workers are fearful of ICE which does not apparently give a damn if the
    people
    whom they are arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green
    cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 10:42:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 2025-12-27 20:55:16 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at the
    supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain issues. >>>
    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the
    testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers that they
    need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE which does not
    apparently give a damn if the people whom they are arresting are
    American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the prices.
    But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    Lynn

    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and
    damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better
    option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported
    temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.


    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Lynn McGuire@lynnmcguire5@gmail.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sat Dec 27 18:44:55 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/27/2025 3:42 PM, Your Name wrote:
    On 2025-12-27 20:55:16 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products.
    This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that
    the one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least
    one of these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting
    truck drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-
    chain issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy.-a I know from news reports including the
    testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers that they
    need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE which does
    not apparently give a damn if the people whom they are arresting are
    American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    Lynn

    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better
    option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.

    Been there, done that, here in South Texas.

    Always in the blazing sun. You forgot the wasps, bees, and snakes
    working alongside you.

    Lynn

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sun Dec 28 08:25:59 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 14:55:16 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was >>> one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk
    ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the testimony of growers >>> that they are not getting the workers that they need for harvest because >>> the
    workers are fearful of ICE which does not apparently give a damn if the
    people
    whom they are arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green >>> cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.
    If the banks will loan them enough.
    And the manufacturers have enough on hand.
    Could be two or three seasons before that solution works.
    Of course, the population will be rather ... thin ... by then. In at
    least two meanings: "they disappear when they turn sideways" and
    "there aren't nearly as many as there used to be".
    And not everything (AFAIK) can be harvested that way.
    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical
    oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 08:28:25 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 10:42:39 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:
    On 2025-12-27 20:55:16 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at the >>>> supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was
    one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain issues. >>>>
    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the
    testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers that they
    need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE which does not >>>> apparently give a damn if the people whom they are arresting are
    American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the prices. >>> But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    Lynn

    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and >damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better
    option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported >temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the >physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.
    I myself once spent a day "hay-baling" with one of my brothers.
    Ah, the joys of youth!
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 18:10:40 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Paul S Person <psperson@old.netcom.invalid> writes:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 10:42:39 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:

    =20
    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.
    =20
    Lynn

    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and=20 >>damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better=20 >>option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported=20 >>temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the=20 >>physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.

    I myself once spent a day "hay-baling" with one of my brothers.

    I spent summers in the 70's threshing oats.

    Day 1: Get the old binder out of the shed and lube well.
    (was originally horse drawn).

    Bind the oats (the binder will cut the stalks which fall
    on a canvas conveyer where they are conveyed to a mechanism
    that gathers them into a circa 12" bundle and ties the bundle
    with twine and drops it on the ground).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EoUYTdwofeo

    Some poor sucker (me, to wit) follows the binder gathering
    six bundles (three under each arm), then 'shocking' those
    bundles (arranging them in an a-frame position with an air
    tunnel aligned with the prevailing winds). If rain is
    expected, spread a 7th bundle across the top of the shock.

    <wait a few days for the grain to dry>

    Day n: Get the threshing machine out of the machine shed and transport
    to the center of the grain field. Carefully level the machine.
    Grease all the zirks (100+), check all the belts, disconnect
    the tractor and attach the drive belt to the tractor (in this
    case a Farmall M).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ag8CxRQi2D8
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4A-OU5A3bOc

    With a tractor and wagon, collect all the shocks and bring them
    to the threshing machine, feeding them by hand into the maw of the
    machine. Straw is blown out the other end into a large pile
    and the grain emptys into a pickup truck (or wagon) for
    transport to the granery.

    Day N+1: Use the hay baler to bale the straw for use as winter bedding for
    the cattle. Stacked in a corner of the haybarn.

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dimensional Traveler@dtravel@sonic.net to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Sun Dec 28 12:03:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 14:55:16 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:

    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's
    tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store".

    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was >>>> one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the
    one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of
    these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk
    ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the testimony of growers >>>> that they are not getting the workers that they need for harvest because >>>> the
    workers are fearful of ICE which does not apparently give a damn if the >>>> people
    whom they are arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green >>>> cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    If the banks will loan them enough.

    And the manufacturers have enough on hand.

    Could be two or three seasons before that solution works.

    Of course, the population will be rather ... thin ... by then. In at
    least two meanings: "they disappear when they turn sideways" and
    "there aren't nearly as many as there used to be".

    And not everything (AFAIK) can be harvested that way.

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange?
    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Mon Dec 29 10:22:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 2025-12-28 20:03:02 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 14:55:16 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's >>>>>> tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store". >>>>>
    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at
    the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This >>>>> was one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the >>>> one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of >>>> these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the >>>>> testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers that they >>>>> need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE which does not >>>>> apparently give a damn if the people whom they are arresting are
    American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    If the banks will loan them enough.

    And the manufacturers have enough on hand.

    Could be two or three seasons before that solution works.

    Of course, the population will be rather ... thin ... by then. In at
    least two meanings: "they disappear when they turn sideways" and
    "there aren't nearly as many as there used to be".

    And not everything (AFAIK) can be harvested that way.

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical
    oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange?

    Probably easier to simply put a "padded box" around the fools coming up
    with such silly ideas. ;-)



    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Bobbie Sellers@bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 14:03:09 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written



    On 12/28/25 13:22, Your Name wrote:
    On 2025-12-28 20:03:02 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 14:55:16 -0600, Lynn McGuire
    <lynnmcguire5@gmail.com> wrote:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's >>>>>>> tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store". >>>>>>
    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at >>>>>> the supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products.
    This was one of the candidate's main talking points during the
    campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the >>>>> one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of >>>>> these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain >>>>>>> problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting >>>>>>> truck
    drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain
    issues.

    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy.-a I know from news reports including
    the testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers
    that they need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE >>>>>> which does not apparently give a damn if the people whom they are >>>>>> arresting are American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of >>>>> years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the
    prices. But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    If the banks will loan them enough.

    And the manufacturers have enough on hand.

    Could be two or three seasons before that solution works.

    Of course, the population will be rather ... thin ... by then. In at
    least two meanings: "they disappear when they turn sideways" and
    "there aren't nearly as many as there used to be".

    And not everything (AFAIK) can be harvested that way.

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical
    oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange?

    Probably easier to simply put a "padded box" around the fools coming up
    with such silly ideas.-a ;-)

    The Japanese farmers produce cubical watermelons because the Consumers like them and yes this does take hand labor. Japanese like things to be
    packed
    according to their ideas properly and frequently use what I would term
    excess
    bagging or boxing to accomplish this. Some of the older forms of
    packaging
    employ natural materials to hold items like eggs separate from each other.
    A book about this is "How to Wrap Five Eggs Traditional" <https://www.amazon.com/How-Wrap-Five-Eggs-Traditional/dp/1590306198>

    Cubical oranges don't sound too likely to be a real item. Picking them would
    be no less labor intensive while packing cubical fruit might have an
    advantage but
    the Japanese would probably like them individually wrapped as they do
    with most
    fruit. Yes, fruit in Japan is expensive.

    bliss
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From The Horny Goat@lcraver@home.ca to rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 16:09:33 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 19:38:11 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:

    Every Trumper knows this stuff. It's like, you know, third grade to them. >>
    Isn't third grade the MAGA equivalent of a doctorate? :P

    MAGA nutters can't even manage to graduate from pre-school. :-\

    You shouldn't really assume everyone who voted for Trump in 2024 were
    true MAGA-ites. I would suspect that at least half of those who voted
    for him in 2024 simply believed he was better than the other name on
    the ballot.

    After all - in politics you don't have to be a 10 to get elected - a 4
    is good enough is the other candidate is a 2 or a 3. I don't think
    either Biden or Harris was the best the Democrats had in 2024 but I do
    believe Trump was better than either of those two, not withstanding I
    think he did a poor job on the pandemic earlier (among other issues)
    and were I an American probably would have chosen him over Harris who
    I think was the weakest candidate the Dems have run in this century.

    And whoever the GOP runs in 2028 won't be running on Trump's record
    probably even if it's Vance. (Who at this point is for now the #1 GOP
    candidate until he proves differently - and I say that as someone who
    read his book the week after he was nominated - I was especially
    interested in reading it as I had read his professor Amy Chua's Battle
    Hymn of the Tiger Mother and noted Vance's tribute to her - they're
    clearly on warm terms particularly as she introduced him to his future
    wife)
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Jay Morris@morrisj@epsilon3.me to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Dec 28 19:33:01 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/28/2025 10:28 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 10:42:39 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:

    On 2025-12-27 20:55:16 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/27/2025 10:35 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Fri, 26 Dec 2025 12:30:07 -0800, Bobbie Sellers
    <bliss-sf4ever@dslextreme.com> wrote:

    <snippo mucho>

    But I am not reading articles stating "95% of MAGA rejects Trump's >>>>>> tariffs because they raise the price they have to pay at the store". >>>>>
    No percentages but some MAGA are waking up to the price of beef at the >>>>> supermarket as well as other frequently purchased products. This was >>>>> one of the candidate's main talking points during the campaign.

    I've read those as well, and, while it is heartening to think that the >>>> one or two that are identified are the tip of iceberg, at least one of >>>> these disgruntled MAGAs did not blame D Trump -- but G Soros.

    Speaking of sheeple ...

    <snippo more-o>

    I am seeing availablity problems reminiscent of the supply chain
    problems during the pandemic. Perhaps ICE is arresting/deporting truck >>>>>> drivers who "look like a Mexican" and so producing supply-chain issues. >>>>>
    Yes and the price of some fruit has moved out of my price range.
    I suspect part of that is tariff and part is the unwillingness of
    drivers to risk ICE idiocy. I know from news reports including the
    testimony of growers that they are not getting the workers that they >>>>> need for harvest because the workers are fearful of ICE which does not >>>>> apparently give a damn if the people whom they are arresting are
    American Citizens or non-citizens with green cards.

    Right now we are still running, I suspect, mostly on the harvests of
    years past. So food is available, but the market is raising the prices. >>>> But that won't last forever if ICE deports the workers..

    If the prices rise then the owners can afford picking machines.

    Lynn

    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and
    damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better
    option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported
    temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the
    physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.

    I myself once spent a day "hay-baling" with one of my brothers.

    Ah, the joys of youth!

    I did that when I was 10-18 for several weeks each summer but that seems
    to be a thing of the past. Now it's either round bales or a machine that
    picks up square bales and stacks them on the hay wagon.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Mon Dec 29 08:58:45 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical
    oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange? Apparently not.
    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round
    oranges.
    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written on Mon Dec 29 09:08:51 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 16:09:33 -0800, The Horny Goat <lcraver@home.ca>
    wrote:
    On Sat, 27 Dec 2025 19:38:11 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:

    Every Trumper knows this stuff. It's like, you know, third grade to them. >>>
    Isn't third grade the MAGA equivalent of a doctorate? :P

    MAGA nutters can't even manage to graduate from pre-school. :-\

    You shouldn't really assume everyone who voted for Trump in 2024 were
    true MAGA-ites. I would suspect that at least half of those who voted
    for him in 2024 simply believed he was better than the other name on
    the ballot.

    After all - in politics you don't have to be a 10 to get elected - a 4
    is good enough is the other candidate is a 2 or a 3. I don't think
    either Biden or Harris was the best the Democrats had in 2024 but I do >believe Trump was better than either of those two, not withstanding I
    think he did a poor job on the pandemic earlier (among other issues)
    and were I an American probably would have chosen him over Harris who
    I think was the weakest candidate the Dems have run in this century.
    I think the Dems, in their eagerness to lose whenever possible,
    /really/ outdid themselves in 2024.
    As I've noted before -- Democrats don't actually win (this is
    particular to the Presidency), Republicans lose.
    Like a race where the winner wins only because the other racer
    stumbles. The result says nothing about who was better.
    And whoever the GOP runs in 2028 won't be running on Trump's record
    probably even if it's Vance. (Who at this point is for now the #1 GOP >candidate until he proves differently - and I say that as someone who
    read his book the week after he was nominated - I was especially
    interested in reading it as I had read his professor Amy Chua's Battle
    Hymn of the Tiger Mother and noted Vance's tribute to her - they're
    clearly on warm terms particularly as she introduced him to his future
    wife)
    If that Republican is smart, the campaign will be based on an
    anti-Trump (if not anti-MAGA) message.
    "This time we'll do it right, because <insert name> actually knows how
    to do the job."
    Depending on who the Dems run, that could win.
    OTOH, if the Republicans (by not curbing Trump) are associate with a
    major disaster, then (as, IIRC, I noted in 1996 [1]) "the Democrats
    could run the mumified corpses and Marx and Lenin and /still/ win".
    [1] Newt shut down the Federal Government, and then was appalled to
    find that, contrary to Republican ideological beliefs, the American
    people /liked/ their Federal Government and wanted it to remain open. Basically, he handed 1996 to Clinton on a silver platter.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Dimensional Traveler@dtravel@sonic.net to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Mon Dec 29 17:35:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/29/2025 8:58 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:

    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:

    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical
    oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange?

    Apparently not.

    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round oranges.

    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...

    Maybe the orange growers have been playing too much Minecraft....
    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Your Name@YourName@YourISP.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Tue Dec 30 18:22:43 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 2025-12-30 01:35:22 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/29/2025 8:58 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:

    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical >>>> oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange? >>
    Apparently not.

    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round
    oranges.

    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...

    Maybe the orange growers have been playing too much Minecraft....

    Most "picking" machines simply shake each tree and either catch the
    falling fruit or 'hoover' it up from the ground. Trying to get a
    machine to actually pick individual fruit would be very difficult and
    it would incorrectly take piles of unripe fruit (idiotic AI might help
    with that, if if ever really works properly).

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.sf.written,rec.arts.comics.strips on Tue Dec 30 08:02:21 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Mon, 29 Dec 2025 17:35:22 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/29/2025 8:58 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:

    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:

    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical >>>> oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange? >>
    Apparently not.

    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round
    oranges.

    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...

    Maybe the orange growers have been playing too much Minecraft....
    I don't think the growers are involved yet, except maybe for a few
    test plots. This is rather more academic/developmental at the moment.
    And, who know, the whole program may have been DOGEd. If it was
    sucking on the Federal teat to begin with.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Paul S Person@psperson@old.netcom.invalid to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Tue Dec 30 08:05:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On Tue, 30 Dec 2025 18:22:43 +1300, Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com>
    wrote:
    On 2025-12-30 01:35:22 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/29/2025 8:58 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:

    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical >>>>> oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange? >>>
    Apparently not.

    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round
    oranges.

    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...

    Maybe the orange growers have been playing too much Minecraft....

    Most "picking" machines simply shake each tree and either catch the
    falling fruit or 'hoover' it up from the ground. Trying to get a
    machine to actually pick individual fruit would be very difficult and
    it would incorrectly take piles of unripe fruit (idiotic AI might help
    with that, if if ever really works properly).
    Or sensors that sniff the fruit -- if pickable fruit smells different
    from not-yet-pickable fruit.
    I say "pickable" because, at least in the past, a lot of fruit was
    picked when it was not-quite-ripe and allowed to ripen during
    shipment. But what the current practice is I have no idea.
    --
    "Here lies the Tuscan poet Aretino,
    Who evil spoke of everyone but God,
    Giving as his excuse, 'I never knew him.'"
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Tue Dec 30 18:40:03 2025
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com> writes:
    On 2025-12-30 01:35:22 +0000, Dimensional Traveler said:
    On 12/29/2025 8:58 AM, Paul S Person wrote:
    On Sun, 28 Dec 2025 12:03:02 -0800, Dimensional Traveler
    <dtravel@sonic.net> wrote:
    On 12/28/2025 8:25 AM, Paul S Person wrote:

    <snippo>

    Which is why some innovative thinkers are trying to produce -- cubical >>>>> oranges. So a machine can pick them easily.

    Wouldn't that require a human to place the box around the wannabe orange? >>>
    Apparently not.

    IIRC, orange-picking machines exist but don't work too well with round
    oranges.

    Or maybe it's the trees they are trying to reshape ...

    Maybe the orange growers have been playing too much Minecraft....

    Most "picking" machines simply shake each tree and either catch the
    falling fruit or 'hoover' it up from the ground. Trying to get a
    machine to actually pick individual fruit would be very difficult and
    it would incorrectly take piles of unripe fruit (idiotic AI might help
    with that, if if ever really works properly).

    I happen to have an orange tree in my backyard. It produces close to
    a gross and a half of fruit over a three month period from Christmas
    through March. It takes discrimination to pick only the ripe fruit,
    both in color, odor and "feel". The fruit is evenly distributed throughout the tree and must be picked carefully to avoid excessive damage to the
    branches holding the fruit. Juice orange picking could perhaps be somewhat automated, but I don't see it happening for fruit sold whole in the near future.

    Perhaps a humanoid robot could be programmed to do so, but I won't be
    holding my breath waiting for that to occur.
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From kludge@kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Thu Jan 1 08:10:50 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Your Name <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:
    For many fruits and vegetables, picking machines are simply useless and >damage the fruit, making it worthless. Human pickers are a far better
    option - usually they're low-paid students, travellers, and imported >temporary workers, mainly because nobody else actually wants to do the >physically hard work, often in the blazing sun.

    The one thing that has made picking machines possible has been the breeding
    of more rugged fruit varieties. Machine picking of tomatoes only works
    because we now have tough-skinned tomatoes that can be shot through a
    hoppier.

    One of the more interesting cases is tea. The Soviets designed machines
    that went over rows of tea plants with a hedge clipper, and produced large amounts of really crappy tea by indiscriminately taking leaves. The
    Japanese now make their lower quality teas with a manually operated
    clipper which is guided to each leaf by an operator but which cuts off
    and vacuums up the leaves. But if you want to do the traditional "two
    leaves and a bud" harvesting, you're still stuck with a huge amount of
    labour.

    A friend across the river has a sweet potato farm, and he uses machine
    picking (which destroys everything above-ground) which he says gets about
    80% of the tubers in the ground. Then he calls in a church group which
    picks the last 20% for charity.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Cryptoengineer@petertrei@gmail.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sat Jan 3 14:01:19 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    On 12/25/2025 7:49 PM, Joy Beeson wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Dec 2025 17:12:23 +1300, Your Name
    <YourName@YourISP.com> wrote:

    Killed because robot vacuum cleaners (and robot lawn mowers, and robot
    mops) are useless, gimmicky devices that unsurprisingly never lived up
    to the hype.

    Our Roomba worked quite well, and probably still would if we
    dug it out of storage. An upright vaccuum cleaner is much
    faster, but you can operate a Roomba while sitting in a lift
    chair, and you don't have to move the furniture.

    When we had to hire our vaccuuming done, we bought an
    upright.


    We have one in my wife's studio, but it has a hard floor.
    It runs at night.

    pt
    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From The True Melissa@thetruemelissa@gmail.com to rec.arts.comics.strips,rec.arts.sf.written on Sun Jan 4 07:47:46 2026
    From Newsgroup: rec.arts.sf.written

    Verily, in article <10ifp77$p3qo$1@dont-email.me>, did
    YourName@YourISP.com deliver unto us this message:

    On 2025-12-24 01:48:00 +0000, Lynn McGuire said:
    On 12/22/2025 5:17 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
    r??This is how the war against the machines beginsr?Y:

    https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/
    AVvXsEjWqK3Ac7LcwhoPWhl6Oq2HiQzqdjpDBVlZFUVRAIRzc2ruKDJD99zr8aoRWGoZ2FUpbPTRuMfYsTD2VBglaNIRr4ID6CUfgblxVrREs0HlMykD5XbGDvpOqoIn6mZh60cvOTuGw_roups7wzd32RdumToZxAWDSPcNi_Jh1PBRroGQaTPmw7VTPr0273c/s550/Meme%20-%20roomba%20Cheetoh.png


    From:

    https://bayourenaissanceman.blogspot.com/2025/12/memes-that-made-me-
    laugh-291.html

    Lynn

    Wow, Roomba just file bankruptcy. r??Roombar??s bankruptcy may wreck a lot more than one robot vacuum makerr?Y
    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/12/20/roomba-bankruptcy-robot-vacuum-maker.html

    r??Product quality was one of the advantages for the Roomba in a flood
    of less expensive knock-offs, but that didnr??t save it from the
    corporate bankruptcy its maker iRobot announced earlier this week. And cheap Chinese competition was not the only factor in its failure. An attempted 2022 acquisition of iRobot by Amazon, thwarted by regulators, and the changing dynamics around mergers and acquisitions, represent an ongoing concern for struggling tech companies that in the past have
    turned to M&A as not just an exit ramp, but savior.r?Y

    r??The company, which Amazon agreed to pay $1.7 billion to acquire in August 2022, reported in a court filing last Sunday that it had between $100 million-$500 million in assets and liabilities, and owed roughly
    $100 million to its largest creditor, Shenzhen Picea Robotics Co., the contract manufacturer, located in China and Vietnam, which now owns it.
    In all, Reuters reported the company has $190 million in debt.r?Y

    Killed by the Chinese knockoffs. Probably from the same manufacturing line.

    Lynn

    Killed because robot vacuum cleaners (and robot lawn mowers, and robot
    mops) are useless, gimmicky devices that unsurprisingly never lived up
    to the hype.

    I love mine. I've relied on these for years, and they've worked well for
    me.

    They're not great at everything, but they're good basic vacuums, and
    they're especially good at picking up pet hair.
    --
    Trustworthy words are not pretty;
    Pretty words are not trustworthy.

    -Lao-Tzu spoke those pretty words.
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