![]() Price controls don’t work the US figured this out during WW2 when it just led to shortages, had spotty enforcement, and needed a gigantic bureaucracy to actually determine prices. There's a big wooly gap between alleged cause and effect that we're just supposed to not question when people confidently tell us their model predicted the outcome. Prices can ONLY go down, up or stay the same - if you wait long enough of course they go up! If prices go up then "AHA! Justified, i told you so". If prices stay low for 5 more years than the models predict then we are told by the over-confident types that we should just wait a little longer to see the effect but they're coming. What we're seeing is a lazy attempt to ignore the models are not useful. My skepticism rises when i hear people confidently proclaim their economoic model predicts anything at the macro level. ![]() Maybe we just need to try extra super duper hard the next time? Classic monetary models clearly predict it should work, we've tried it hundreds of times in different countries over the past ~100 years, and it's worked once. ? I mean it's constantly tried everywhere (Greece is a good recent example of its futility). ![]() Respectfully, models that are known to be wrong, as all models are - they are models after all.Īusterity - where has that ever worked? Post-war Germany and. > What we are seeing is the predictable result of the classic monetary models It’s far from perfect, but I can make it do nearly everything I need it to without having to strain my brain at the checkout screen. ![]() Even though they do have perpetual fallback, it doesn’t seem like a giant bloated IDE like this will hold up very long without updates. It also doesn’t help that they have a subscription licensing plan. I couldn’t tell if that means I have to also buy the P圜harm IDE and deal with two different IDEs running at once. I was interested in buying CLion, but also needed to be able to work with Python in the same project. Why isn’t language support implemented as plugins if all the IDEs share a common framework? Last I checked, it seemed like they do have an “ultimate” version with multiple language support… except that one doesn’t support C/C++. They have a bunch of different IDEs sold separately that ultimately seem to be identical except for language support. Jetbrains doesn’t get my money because of how much of a confusing mess their product lineup is.
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