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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • The final summary of the article you linked:

    “Using 105,950 observations from 32 different studies we find that CVC investments are performance enhancing, for both corporations and start-ups. Our results detect that time, country, and industry moderate the effects. Especially after the Dotcom bubble burst, high performance is detected. Similarly, the performance in the U.S. outreaches the performance of other countries. Due to the high risk of successfully developing a pharmaceutical drug, no statistically significant effect of CVC investments in the health care industry is observed. As expected, strategic performance outperforms financial impacts. Although there is good rationale for a clear strategic focus, the finding that CVC investment does not lead to stronger financial performance is surprising and urges practitioners to rethink their CVC objectives and approach”

    Disregarding the fact that this is only looking at CVCs and not traditional VCs, I don’t think this really supports your argument that it is a dice roll at best. Seems to me like it is broadly beneficial with some caveats.





  • KarmaTrainCaboose@lemmy.worldtomemes@lemmy.worldNO!
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    1 year ago

    Maybe some well off black people wouldn’t use the word, but it certainly would not be acceptable for any white person to use it in any context. Even if they grew up in “the hood” it would, at the very least, be frowned upon for them to say it. In many places it would earn them an immediate beat down.



  • Are you serious? Look at that map. Those yellow areas are absolutely massive. It includes huge swathes of suburban areas, not “dense cities”. I mean look at Dallas, Atlanta, or SoCal in that pic. My point is that in those suburban areas most people are not within a reasonable walking distance of a grocery store.

    Just because they’re centered around a major metro area doesn’t mean the people living there are close to one. I live in on of those cities in what someone would consider an “urban/suburban” area. For me to walk to my closest grocery store it would take me 30 minutes each way according to Google maps. That’s not reasonable. Keep in mind that you’ve got to actually carry the groceries on the way back. And I’m probably in a denser area than most.

    EDIT: According to the USDA, americans are on average 2.2 miles from a SNAP authorized store. That’s a 45 minute walk each way. No Americans are not just “lazy” for not walking to the store. It just isn’t a reasonable think to do at all.