2024-08-04 14:24:01
The “cloud” is a term used by most people familiar with tech, and the phrase “up in the cloud” is incredibly common. Assuming someone thinks this literally is misinformation at best, lack of understanding at worst. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(28-2-35) Author
2024-08-04 15:36:57
NNN 1. Author posters personal opinion. 2. “That exists above us.” - it is not common for one to claim that the cloud exists above us. 3. “It's no longer in a physical place.” - files in the cloud are indeed stored in a physical space, on server racks in data centers. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(19-1-10) Author
2024-08-04 15:39:09
NNN. KH's claim that: "it's no longer in a physical place" is demonstrably wrong: the files are stored in a physical place, usually a datacenter. Her phrasing "exists above us" supports OP's claim. Even if it didn't, it's still his personal opinion. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(19-0-11) Author
2024-08-04 18:06:30
“The cloud” is metaphor of a global network of servers. In tech flow charts & diagrams of the internet, it was always at the top— the “up.” [Link][Link] Posts like Eric Abbenante can be seen as rage farming. This is a common tactic to make money on X (previously Twitter.) NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(26-1-23) Author
2024-08-05 04:07:08
This soundbite is taken from a talk Harris gave in 2010. While the language is clunky and imprecise, it was commonplace for a layperson to use such terminology to describe cloud storage 14 years ago. [Link] NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(8-1-17) Author
2024-08-06 19:40:12
NNN. It's very different to draw a metaphorical cloud at the top of an information flow chart, than to physically point upwards and say that it "exists above us" and "no longer in a physical place." Kamala is clearly not talking about a chart. She doesn't understand the concept. NEEDS_MORE_RATINGS(8-0-1) Author