• limer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      True meritocracy had never been implemented in any human society larger than a small village.

      It had been partially implemented in several places/times

      What we have today is a partially implemented one in middle management, technocrats and engineers.

      Where out of touch upper management and owners are the rule. But if I look at any successful company I will find the tech and middle management running it day to day

      • segabased@lemmy.zip
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        5 hours ago

        We’re so close to just having the workers run their own affairs, the table is set we just have to make everyone realize the actual owners are useless and do nothing

        • nyamlae@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          And more than just realizing that, we need to find a realistic path to take that power away from them.

          • limer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 hours ago

            And more than that not have a different group of upper class later. As had happened always.

            I’d rather not go through the churn if no real difference a few years later

  • Andy@slrpnk.netOP
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    7 hours ago

    For those wondering why it did fly that way, it was a whole thing on Twitter: weather, fly zones, mostly.

    https://www.thepoke.com/2025/02/26/elon-musk-said-planes-fly-straight-line-owned-into-economy-class/

    Obviously the permanent main character on Twitter popped up to assert that planes must go straight despite flying in a private jet constantly that doesn’t do that, and after a few hours the original guy said he asked the pilot when they landed (20 min ahead of schedule) and the pilot told him it was to avoid turbulence, which is likely what they say when a full answer seems like it’ll just go over folks heads.

    • PM_Your_Nudes_Please@lemmy.world
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      There’s also the Great Circle flight paths. Essentially, because the earth is round, it’s actually a shorter distance to fly in an “arc” (when looking at a flat map). In the below picture, the upper curved line is actually shorter than the lower straight line:

      Here’s another image which demonstrates why the curved line looks longer on a flat map:

      And because of how map projections work, this applies to virtually any flight path that isn’t directly north/south… Just like the one in OP’s photo.

      • merdaverse@lemmy.world
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        The path in the post has nothing to do with the great circle. The shortest path is very similar to how it appears on the Mercator projection (actually slightly bent in the other direction) because SF and Houston are fairly close and in a position where Mercator distortions are less pronounced.

        Also, a line is the shortest path when the 2 points are both on the Equator (where the projection distortion is zero)

        • maxdejesus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          It’s also good to mention that the projection shown in the tweet wasn’t Mercator either, it was a globe rendered via Apple Maps.

        • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Worth pointing out too, that the air isn’t “flat” either, you can have headwinds, tailwinds, and turbulence that will affect the shortest and most economical path.

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      There’s also the fact that the earth is an oblate spheroid and great circles are the shortest distance between two points on that shape. (Though this may not apply for short flights like this.)

    • melpomenesclevage@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      no, this is SF to LA. It was the estrogen in the water that turned the flight path gay.

      edit: we may also have local aviation laws that prevent straight flight paths. I’m not familiar with california aviation laws.

  • PotatoLibre@feddit.it
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    10 hours ago

    Musk’s DOGE let data leak, erased data from a goverment db by misstake, fired important figure working with nuke programs, Ebola and more in front of the whole fucking world.

    Can you imagine a bigger fuck up?

    • varyingExpertise@feddit.org
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      3 hours ago

      For now I assume that the whole thing is working out well for Mr. Musk. By now he has probably weakened the specific agencies that were a thorn in his side sufficiently he’ll earn back the few hundred million it cost him to buy that position.

      So he’s not an idiot, but he’s a problem.

      • Fluke@lemm.ee
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        6 hours ago

        Ah, but he didn’t hire him, he just made him an advisor. Hiring him would required oversight that would have given others a chance to give a firm “Fuck No”.

  • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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    12 hours ago

    You can be the dumbest mother fucker the Earth has ever produced and you will still easily be able get a business degree from any greasy college of your choice.

    • BakerBagel@midwest.social
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      8 hours ago

      It’s wild to me that consumting has become such a massive industry in the last 20 years. It’s all just a bunch of kids freah out of college with zero experience in anything practical telling you to cut costs, raises prices, and do light crime. Why do companies pay millions when the CEO’s dumbass son could have just told them the same thing?

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        7 hours ago

        CYA and possibly liability reasons. “I didn’t make the bad decision, I was following the advice of the consultants.”

        But also there are times you actually do need advice from experts. Not all consultants are bad. But yeah, a lot of it is just CYA stuff.

  • ugh@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    Y’all, this has nothing to do with the curvature of the Earth. There are mountains and multiple no-fly zones that would be crossed if they flew in a straight line.

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      It’s still presented in an anti-intellectual “just asking questions” format though.

      Further we are all just internet jabronis. It isn’t literally our job to know this stuff. Knowing this stuff is kind of literally this guys job. Knowing the things you just described is kind of the whole “logistics” thing.

      Whatever the reasons for the path are, we accept that qualified people know what they are doing. In asking this question, he is showing how unqualified he is.

      • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I worked for almost 40 years at a company that made rocket engines. For the first couple decades (and all the time prior to my starting there), the head of the company was someone who came up through the ranks. They were very knowledgeable about rocket engines, or at least very knowledgeable at the aspect that they worked on (there are a lot of specialties involved), and somewhat knowledgeable about the others.

        But as the company traded hands, we ended up with CEOs or GMs that knew nothing about rockets and instead were just focused on the business aspects of it. Some of them were smart people, but they wouldn’t have cared if the company was making spoons or skateboards. From my vantage point, the company really went downhill when that happened, but I don’t think it’s uncommon these days.

        So I wouldn’t be surprised if this guy knows nothing about logistics.

      • Tiresia@slrpnk.net
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        9 hours ago

        Maybe I’m reading too much into this, but this kind of sounds like a technofascist trial balloon to push for the privatization of the US military. The implication being

        Why can’t our nation’s air industry not simply buy the right to fly through no-fly zones? This is deep state oppression curtailing YOUR freedoms to go where-ever you please. If we just privatize military research and production it will be more productive (SpaceX is better than NASA) and American (a big state is communist; those military officers that don’t want to invade Canada are traitors), and people can fly over SpaceX’s latest acquisition Area 51X if they buy the rights.

        Project 2025 was not written by Trump even if he is the executor/scapegoat. Smart people exist and work for the politicians, shareholders and lobbyists that shape current US policy. And trial balloons don’t need to be cleverly worked out, in the era of Trump you can just throw stuff at the wall, see what sticks, and pay private media to not make a story out of the rest. There’s a good chance this will come to nothing, but why wouldn’t a petty technocrat try to ingratiate himself to the new technofascist regime by offering a win-win.

        • danc4498@lemmy.world
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          Good point when a smart person says something undeniably dumb, you have to remember there is intent behind the statement. What that intent is usually presents itself much later.

      • jonne@infosec.pub
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        12 hours ago

        Thank you for articulating why exactly I felt this way about the post. I couldn’t quite get to that point myself.

      • Hawke@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        No… that the people running the show who should know how the businesses they make decisions for actually work.

        The fact that google maps does not use a projection where direct routes appear as straight lines, that planes take great circle routes, and that there are hubs which make direct point-to-point flights less efficient should be no surprise to anyone, let alone the CEO of a logistics company, for whom it is literally their job to know how this shit works.

        • argon@lemmy.today
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          14 hours ago

          It really isn’t their job to know how it works. Their job is to manage other people who know how it works.

          • Hawke@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            I mean, I guess: if you think their job is to be a shitty incompetent CEO.

            Im not saying they need to know how to do the job of everyone at the company, but they certainly should know what their company does and how.

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            14 hours ago

            So why is he there then instead of someone who at least understands the business a bit?

            Plenty of takers for that salary.

            • argon@lemmy.today
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              12 hours ago

              He understands the business.

              He doesn’t understand technical details, which is something very different.

              He tells people “go find the ideal route”. He doesn’t find the ideal route himself.

              If a CEO of a large company attempted to learn all skills of every single one of his employees, he would spend a couple centuries learning, instead of doing his job.

              His job being: Telling the right people to find the ideal route.

              And he himself clearly isn’t one of these people. And he doesn’t need to be.

              (You wouldn’t expect Tim Cook to know every legal detail of all the countries he trades to either. Because that’s not his job. His job is to hire lawyers who know every legal detail of all the countries he trades to.)

              • dockedatthewrongworf@aussie.zone
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                13 hours ago

                Though he might be ridiculed less if instead of posting on xitter he went to one of his workers who work in this field and ask them why the flight plan was plotted that way.

                • ikt@aussie.zone
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                  10 hours ago

                  Yeah I was like if he works in logistics while not ask an employee, surely he’d have a CTO or someone technical nearby to grab?

              • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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                12 hours ago

                LMAO, yeah, you’re a Trumper. Can’t even stay on one position between two comments: does he understand the business(no) or not?

                • argon@lemmy.today
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                  11 hours ago

                  I’m European.

                  Do you not understand the difference between business management and technical engineering?

                  He understands business management. He doesn’t understand particular technical aspects.

                  Expecting the CEO to posess all the skills of all his employees is foolish.

          • flyingSock@feddit.org
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            14 hours ago

            They should know enough about how it works to not waste the time of those who work by asking stupid questions. But maybe that is why he resorted to asking the internet instead.

            • argon@lemmy.today
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              13 hours ago

              I mean yeah, he’s asking stupid questions to the internet.

              He doesn’t ask his engineers, who’ve got better things to do than to answer his questions.

              He likely thought “Oh, that route planning looks odd. Since I’m sure the engineers know what they’re doing, this must be the ideal path, but I certainly am curious as to why that is. Hey X, why don’t the planes fly in straight lines?”

              It’s a perfectly legitimate question to ask for someone who’s job isn’t engineering, but hiring people who hire people who’s job is engineering.

              • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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                10 hours ago

                He doesn’t ask his engineers, who’ve got better things to do than to answer his questions.

                Engineers are generally happy to answer their manager’s / funder’s questions bc that means that they care about the details and can make more informed decisions. Also, the manager learns who they can call for in case of an emergency where they need something explained.

                • argon@lemmy.today
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                  10 hours ago

                  I agree. I only added that to not argue with the parent comment about their point that CEOs should “not waste the time of those who work by asking stupid questions”.

      • Tobberone@lemm.ee
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        13 hours ago

        Because the correct answer to his question is: “First day on the job, huh?”

  • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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    13 hours ago

    He should ask Luigi for a detailed description of fly-zones, fuel consumption vs altitude and terrain, and air traffic (timing) to a lesser extent.

    • Spezi@feddit.org
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      12 hours ago

      You are way overthinking it, the problem suggested by OP is much simpler: it‘s all about the mercator projection of the map.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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        52 minutes ago

        I hate people who blame the Mercator projection without properly learning about what is wrong with it.

        1. This is not a Mercator projection map. The northern side of the US is straight and horizontal on Mercartor maps.
        2. “Straight lines” on a globe (great circles) on the Northern hemisphere bend in this ⏜ way, not this ⏝ on a Mercartor map.
        3. Flattening a sphere without compromises is impossible. Most other projections are either unusable in many local contexts or don’t span the globe. Mercator (specifically the WGS-84 implementation) works very well unless your journey goes over ±84° latitude, which is OK for most cases. Every other projection will stretch, skew or cut local areas in major ways and EVERY ONE WILL SHOW (almost every instance of) THE SHORTEST (great circle) PATH AS NOT STRAIGHT. And the last, all-caps point only manifests for long journeys. If you can travel long distances in a straight line, you are piloting a ship or aircraft, and you can afford a computer to plot the great circle curve.

        Actual problems with Mercator:

        1. It needs to be infinitely tall to cover poles. This map shows how tall a version that gets to .1 mm from the South Pole is. Therefore, polar researchers and the military need to get another app for navigation (along with hardware for whatever the substitute for GPS is).
        2. It significantly distorts sizes at different latitudes so it’s not recommended for showing the entire world, especially for a child’s first impression. There are worse picks, such as Gall-Peters (which preserves sizes but stretches shapes horribly unless you are close to the very conveniently picked 45° latitude where most of the Europe lives, nullifying the notion that the map combats imperiallism) or Dymaxion (which I love but cutting oceans and the equator into incongruent pieces strewn all over the page does not help children grasp basic geography).
      • Lightdm@feddit.org
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        11 hours ago

        “Sadly” not really. As this is the northern hemisphere the “shorter” path would be an arc opening downwards. As others have commented, there are other reasons for this route.

      • Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee
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        If that is the case, then op is wrong, that’s not how mercator works (the opposite actually).
        (I’m glad this isn’t Reddit or I would be forced by custom to explain in detail the sexy times I had with their mother.)

        But aviation logistic is complex (duh), there are so many things.

        Among which I now realise I previously forgot to mention various weather phenomena (that can make you save fuel).

  • Max@lemmy.world
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    I’m confused. People are saying this is due to earths curvature, but this is in the northern hemisphere so shorter paths should be more northern, not more southern.

    See this map of the actual shortest distance line (purple) for those two points. The image OP’s question seems much more reasonable given this information?

    • Eatspancakes84@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago
      1. The question is not stupid at all.
      2. we would expect the CEO of a logistics company to be able to answer such a question (or at least know who to ask to get the right answer), instead of asking it on X. Asking it on X at best shows of his ignorance, or at worst pushes a conspiracy theory.
    • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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      14 hours ago

      Planes don’t fly great circle routes though, there’s overfly fees, weather, mountains, ETOPS and just plain politics… This route looks ordinary compared to some international routes, eg Helsinki to Singapore where you dodge Russia and Ukraine for politics, taking you way below the great circle route, then Turkey for overfly fees and Iran for politics, taking you almost back up to the great circle route, before dipping down again to avoid the Himalayas

      1000046746

      • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        Not sure if flying over Afghanistan is a better option than Iran tho. Betting on the Taliban (or the various groups they’re fighting against) don’t have the capability to shoot down airplanes I guess.

        That route just looks like a minefield considering the geopoltics along most of that path.

        • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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          5 hours ago

          Why would the Taliban want to shoot down a plane? They’re not terrorists like IS or Al-Qaeda and they’re not antsy enough to shoot down a plane first and think later like Iran are, nor is it an active warzone… They just want to commit human rights violations in peace and shooting down a plane is a golden ticket to foreign intervention.

        • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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          11 hours ago

          Green is actual data, white is straight lines connecting the green, but they don’t have data.

          The cut across Northern Iran is just a straight line, but they will have stayed north of the border.

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      It’s the way ATC routing works. In this case they might route SFO - IAH traffic over the southern route because it doesn’t interfere with westbound traffic heading to PHX or SFO, and this might be over southern airways. Go IAH - SFO and the route might be northern over LAS as route you plotted shows to mesh with the larger traffic flow going E to W. Who knows. But ATC routing often doesn’t follow a straight line, there’s lots of factors that send aircraft over less efficient routes.

      It’s still not a great question in the context OP posted it because, as others have mentioned, the question is phrased as an accusation (JAQ-ing off) that makes no attempt to understand the airspace system and is probably asked in bad faith by Petersen.

    • zerofk@lemm.ee
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      15 hours ago

      The question is very reasonable - and the answer far from obvious as evident from the wrong one being uprooted in this thread. To be clear: I don’t know the answer either, only that you’re right about the curve going the wrong way.

      What’s more worrying is the CEO of a global logistics company asking it - and on a public forum rather than of his employees.

      It’s akin to a school director standing in the schoolyard during recess and asking why his teachers aren’t in the classroom teaching at that moment.

      • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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        He’s not asking because he understands great circles or is suddenly curious about planes. He’s “just asking questions”, specifically on a public forum to drum up disinformation and anti-science rhetoric. He’s essentially giving a shout-out to his conservative skeptic gang that if powerful rich people question science and common knowledge, they should keep doing it too

      • Fontasia@feddit.nl
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        15 hours ago

        I think the more concerning thing is this question appears to be asked in a way that’s insulting to the pilot. What was the guy concerned about? Flight time? Fuel use? He could have made a polite question asking pilots on Twitter about what influences flight paths.

        The pilot flying the plane obviously chose this path on purpose and this guy takes the very American position that admission of ignorance is a weakness.

        • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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          10 hours ago

          The pilot flying the plane obviously chose this path on purpose

          I think most corporate pilots have a company center that works out the flight paths for them. This probably doesn’t apply to private jets tho.

    • Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      My heard-from-online understanding is that this is a combination of multiple factors:

      • planes tend to route over major airports so that there’s always an emergency landing site nearby
      • there are restricted airspaces that commercial planes cannot fly through
      • the most direct path sometimes isn’t the best path. There are stable wind channels in certain areas of the world and it’s more efficient to ride the wind channel than to fly in a straight line
      • NaibofTabr@infosec.pub
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        14 hours ago
        • planes tend to route over major airports so that there’s always an emergency landing site nearby

        I think you’ve got it right. This flight path is basically:
        SFO > LAX > PHX > ELP > AUS > IAH

    • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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      The post is indeed not a great circle.

      Redraw the path nearest to the red line but avoid the areas marked in green and you have your answer. Arizona is at a pretty high elevation and the rockies stretch from new mexico through colorado onwards, so they probably fly around the other way under the Rockies.

      Edit: i think his question is still disingenuous

  • MyDarkestTimeline01@lemmynsfw.com
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    17 hours ago

    It has been my experience that the closer you get to the CEO position the more a person believes “I don’t have to know how to do the task, I just have to employ someone who does!”

    • AlecSadler@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      As someone who has been a CEO (on paper, it was largely meaningless) before…yes…but also have some fucking humility and wisdom and the ability to know what you don’t know.

      I don’t know shit, and I’ll admit I don’t know shit, and if I feel the need to comment on something I don’t know shit about, then maybe I’ll defer to someone who is better educated to answer. Jesus christ.

    • Webster@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      I’m no where near the CEO level, but I am a mid level manager. There are enough different things going on in my org that there is no way I could know how to do everything. However, I view my role as empowering and supporting those who do. I understand I can’t do the things, so I spend most of my time listening to those who can. The problems come when people start thinking they know better than those doing the work. I strongly believe I work for my team, and if that ever gets me out of alignment with upper management, I’ve accepted that means I’ll be let go. But this model has gotten me great success.

    • SuperUserDO@sh.itjust.works
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      I’ve found there are two types of “leaders”. One are the people you describe, the others are knowledgeable staff who somehow ended up in management at one point and realized they had to stay less the idiots take over.

      One also calls themselves “thought leaders” while the other group is still working at 8pm.

  • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    16 hours ago

    I remember when I was in college in the early 2000’s, one of my close friends found work under the table writing original research papers for students at more prestigious universities. That way, the rich kids could plagiarize a paper but since it was wholly original and had never been seen anywhere else, they couldn’t get caught for plagiarism. It helped my friend out a lot when he was in a tight spot trying to get his Masters degree, but… I’ve thought about it a lot over the years and the long-term impacts.

    I think this is one of the long-term impacts. People who have credentials, but credentials essentially mean nothing because a lot of the “work” they did to get those credentials was paid-for or faked. This has lead to a world where the people “running the show” as it were are deeply uneducated while the people doing the actual labor and thought who are often getting underpaid are wildly more educated than the people they have to suffer under working for.

    The wealthy have become so privileged that they don’t even need to know the details of how anything actually works and now they are going to make all of us suffer because they don’t believe the evidence that would have been presented to them at some point if they had actually gotten a real education.

    • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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      12 hours ago

      This is precisely why I’m terrified of the generation that’s going through college with chatgpt right now. These people will be doctors and nurses.

    • yunxiaoli@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      This has always been the case though. The wealthy have rarely known more than how to get and maintain wealth, which isn’t that hard when you’re statistically born into it.

    • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Pretty sure paying for someone to do your homework is a thing in India for the wealthy. There are also lots of rich students, who were failed by teachers in tests, give a not so subtle threatening question “do you know who my father is?” As a result, plenty of people attain higher job positions without the actual merit.

      • jonne@infosec.pub
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        12 hours ago

        It’s a thing everywhere. Donald Trump has a degree and he sure as fuck doesn’t know anything about anything.

      • Dragon Rider (drag)@lemmy.nz
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        12 hours ago

        It happens all over the world. Some cultures put less value on knowledge and more on success, but every culture has selfish lazy rich assholes.

        Except the communist ones. They just have selfish lazy assholes of average wealth.

  • Zier@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    Without knowing the flight number, airline and date, we don’t know the route it’s scheduled to fly. It may stop in LA or Phoenix. Need more info.

    • ugh@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      There are mountains and multiple no-fly zones along the direct path. They’re avoiding those.

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        15 hours ago

        While there is obviously a lot of military restricted airspace around Nellis, China Lake, and Irwin, the planned route takes the flight 100s of miles further south than necessary.

        They are following charted airway routes designated by the FAA. These routes exist to help manage air traffic, ensure accurate navigation, and avoid collisions. Few if any direct routes exist between airports.

        • ugh@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          Yes, that too. It’d be much more convenient if we could drive in a straight line to our destination, but roads were built for a reason! Air traffic is no different.

    • astrsk@fedia.io
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      16 hours ago

      Yes No, this is not a great circle route. I missed the fact it’s north of the equator. Like others have said, this is likely due to ATC traffic routing, land, and politics.

    • bisby@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      If you do a search for “map of united states latitudes” you can see that the latitudes across the US are curved in this exact orientation.

      There might be further reasons that it’s not a direct A to B, like wind patterns or weather etc, but it’s mostly just that lines of latitude (which are straight east/west lines) are not perfectly straight lines on most map projections.

      • MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
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        16 hours ago

        That’s misleading. The shortest route would be the “great circular” joining the two points, which lines of latitude definitely are not.

        The only line of latitude which is a great circle is the equator.

        • bisby@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I never said the shortest route. a plane flying “in a straight line west to east” would show up as as a curve on the map was all I was trying to convey. It’s possible this plane’s bearing doesn’t drastically change throughout this flight. “Straight lines” get real messy when you convert a sphere into a 2d projection for maps.

          Then a further addition that there are other reasons to not fly in a direct straight line anyway. “Shortest route direct A to B” is an ideal condition, and the world is an always an ideal place.

          • MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
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            4 hours ago

            “shortest route” and “straight line” actually mean pretty much the same thing. The shortest route is the straight line. Sorry if I confused the matter by switching up the terminology.

            Flying parallel to the lines of latitude would mean that your bearing doesn’t change much, sure, but flying in a straight line would require your heading to change continuously.

            The aircraft in the screenshot was flying a very not-straight course

    • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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      16 hours ago

      It is flying in a straight line, but is doing so around the edge of a sphere. The map is distorted to project the sphere onto a flat image.

      • MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
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        16 hours ago

        No, it’s not. It’s noth of the equator, so the straight line route would look like a curve towards the north. This route is curved south, which means it’s actually because of air traffic control routing them along approved flight paths. That might be for traffic management reasons, or because of terrain on the route, or restricted airspace.

        • Telorand@reddthat.com
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          15 hours ago

          While I have no reason to suspect you’re wrong, the idiot in the original image is almost certainly trying to imply a flat Earth. Your clarification would not be well-received by someone like them.

          Pearls before swine and all that.

      • Telorand@reddthat.com
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        16 hours ago

        And to add, planes have been flying like this for decades, and curvature of the earth is part of calculating important things like fuel requirements.