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" ... "Part of the problem is that marketers look at the 50-plus group monolithically. They see age instead of considering life stages, the psychographics, the motivations. There are differences between a working older adult and a retired older adult and between someone who is physically active versus less physically active." ... "
" ... Once VCSELs are used as the illumination choice, it almost dictates the choice of SPAD detectors. This is because SPADs are single photon sensitive - this means that instead of a large energy pulse required with a traditional linear detector to extract 3D information via ToF approaches (Cells ❶, ❸ and ❺ in Table 1), a series of lower power pulses can be used to extract the same information. Given the lower peak power capability of a VCSEL (as opposed to an EEL), this is a natural fit. SPADs need narrow spectral filtering to reduce false returns due to solar background - and the lower VCSEL wavelength variation with temperature allows for practical deployment of SPAD filters and overall manufacturing yields. Additionally, at the 8XX-9XX nm wavelengths, SPADs and readout electronics can be monolithically fabricated on silicon wafers using CMOS processing, leading to cost-effective solutions (generally not true for linear mode APDs). ... "
" ... Speaking of the FT, it published a March 30, 1981 letter by 364 highly prominent economists in an attempt to discredit Margaret Thatcher’s “disastrous” economic ideas. Whoops! This is mentioned because Rattner cites a poll of 40 economists from 2012 in which not one supported reviving the gold standard. I’ll one-up him: a poll of nearly every economist would unearth near universal agreement that all the maiming, killing and wealth destruction that took place during World War II actually stimulated the economy. It would be hard to find a more horrifying, boneheaded belief than this one, but economists almost monolithically buy into it. In short, who cares that economists are broadly skeptical about a return to commodity-defined money? The Fed employs more economists than any entity on earth. Can Rattner find even three major Fed reports over the last ten years that actually predicted something correctly? One? ... "