Why does birth tourism to middle class foreigners bother Americans, but millions of children of millions of TPS foreigners don’t concern anyone?

A post on X about birth tourism that turned middle class Hondurans into Americans was exciting enough to get over 750,000 views:

Stories about Chinese birth tourism “rings” also reliably generate interest/outrage. Anyone with enough money to participate in a birth tourism scheme is from at least a middle class family in a foreign country and, therefore, is unlikely to become the founder of a multi-generational welfare dynasty. (Statistically, those who grow up in self-sufficient households are likely to be adults in self-sufficient households.)

Meanwhile, the US citizens being birthed by foreigners here “temporarily” under Temporary Protected Status, some since 1990, aren’t of interest. Neither Gemini nor ChatGPT could even begin to estimate how many foreigners, total, have spent time in the U.S. under TPS. Partly because of that, neither AI could begin to estimate how many children they’ve had, each one with a U.S. passport. The best that the AIs can do is come up with 1.3 million foreign TPS holders in the U.S. right now and possibly 390,000 U.S. citizen children living with them. Gemini estimates that the majority of TPS households with children are on what used to be called “welfare” (“safety-net participation”), but even AI probably can’t see into all of the state-run programs for which immigration status isn’t relevant, e.g., health care in California, public housing in Maskachusetts, etc. Our AI overlords say that the majority of children who in welfare-eligible households will grow up to adults living in welfare-eligible households (i.e., multi-generational welfare is the expectation, though at just over 50 percent). These stats are somewhat complicated by non-welfare welfare programs, e.g., the various below-market-rate rent schemes in New York City that cover more than half of rental units there.

During the entire time that the above-described Honduras-to-US pipeline was running, there was a 26-year “temporary” program to allow some favored subset of Hondurans to live in the U.S. There were over 100,000 Hondurans granted TPS during the program’s launch in 1999. Gemini says that almost no Honduran ever went back before Donald Trump ended their status and that almost none went home after the September 2025 termination either:

The termination of TPS did not grant Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) the right to summarily deport people. To be removed from the country, individuals who do not leave voluntarily must be issued a Notice to Appear (NTA) and go through the formal immigration court system.

With immigration courts already facing massive multi-million case backlogs, processing thousands of long-term residents with clean criminal histories and significant family equities in the U.S. takes years, effectively leaving them in a prolonged state of legal limbo within the United States.

So a handful of pregnant Hondurans with the family resources (maybe from U.S. relatives) to pay for roundtrip airfare to Boston generates outrage due to the resulting 10+ U.S.-born anchor babies. Not a single one of these kids has ever been on welfare, to my knowledge, unless we consider the taxpayer-funded hospital payments to be welfare. But perhaps 100,000 births to Hondurans here under TPS, nearly all of which were similarly paid for by taxpayers and then resulted in welfare eligibility for at least 18 years, aren’t interesting.

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Claude is “marginally the best, but quite expensive”

From a friend who uses LLMs to write code…

Current state of affairs according to me:

OpenAI is at the frontier. There is no reason to use Terra, as there is a Luna or Sol model at an effort level that matches it for cheaper. You can get quite a lot of inference out of the $20/mo plan. $100/mo gives you 5x, but $200/mo gives you 20x, not 10.
Claude Fable is marginally the best, but quite expensive and falls back to Opus on anything it considers remotely questionable, while still charging Fable prices.

Gemini’s latest is 3.5-flash and is well off the curve. The latest non-flash is still 3.1-pro.

GLM 5.2 is the best open weight Chinese model, but its price per token is misleading as it eats up reasoning tokens like crazy.

Best local coding model is probably Qwen 3.6 27B. Gemma 4 is a good local all around model to talk to, but not as good at coding.


Where will these various models run? New York State has banned data centers, which is forward-thinking but I prefer to reflect on the exquisite timing of the New York political elite in shutting down their massive nuclear electricity plant just one year before the AI/data center boom began (launch of ChatGPT in 2022):

How about AI data centers in space?

Loosely related:

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Don’t go outside, says the New York Times

You’ll die from the Canadian and Minnesotan (Somali?) smoke if you go outside in the north and from “dangerous” heat if you go outside in the south, says the NYT (front page):

The smoke is due to “climate change”, according to Canada’s Prime Minister (NYT).

How bad is it? aviationweather.gov:

METAR KORD 162051Z 05010KT 1SM R10L/P6000FT FU VV020 32/18 A3003
METAR KTOL 162052Z 00000KT 1SM R25/4500V5000FT FU BKN018 OVC024 31/1857007
SPECI KCLE 162109Z 36007KT 2SM FU SCT000 BKN026 BKN250 28/09 A3003
METAR KBUF 162054Z 23011KT 2 1/2SM FU SCT031 BKN065 OVC200 26/18 A2996 
METAR KTEB 162051Z 26008G14KT 1 1/2SM FU BKN020 OVC033 30/18 A298

Chicago is down to 1 statute mile of visibility (IMC begins at 3 SM so everyone has to be on an instrument flight plan) in smoke (“FU”, which sounds rude but is actually French (pre-Islamic)). Notice that Chicago and Teterboro, NJ are both at toasty temps of 32C and 30C, respectively.

Toledo, Ohio is also at 1 SM. Things get better moving east to Cleveland (2 miles) and Buffalo (2.5 miles), but get worse as one approaches the Mamdani Caliphate (1.5 miles visibility in smoke).

What about if Lionel Messi is home in Fort Lauderdale celebrating his recent victory over an African/Islamic nation? It’s “good”:

Same site for Chicago:

Let’s check the aviation weather for SE Florida, a hellscape of dangerous heat and unavailable abortion care, according to the NYT:

METAR KDJT 162053Z 22006KT 10SM FEW030 BKN250 33/18 A3005 RMK AO2 SLP175 T03330178 58016 $
METAR KFLL 162053Z 13007KT 10SM FEW030 SCT150 BKN190 BKN250 31/24 A3005 RMK AO2 SLP175 T03110244 56013
METAR KMIA 162053Z 12008KT 10SM SCT046 SCT055 SCT220 34/24 A3005 RMK AO2 TSE28 SLP177 CB DSNT SW T03390244 57006 $

Why only 10 miles of viz at President Donald J. Trump International Airport? (formerly PBI) That’s as high as the automated systems go. Note that Messi’s home in Fort Lauderdale is actually one degree C cooler than Chicago!

If this all clears before EAA AirVenture starts in Oshkosh, Wisconsin on Monday I will personally support Greta Thunberg for multiple Nobel Prizes (physics, chemistry, and peace?).

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Federal government rewrites Disney’s Circle of Life (SNAP then Ozempic via Medicare)

CBS:

Because federal tax dollars are free, of course, the CBS story covers what Medicare beneficiaries will pay ($50/month) and doesn’t mention what it will cost the young taxpayers who are being hit to pay for keeping Boomers alive forever (ChatGPT says $6 billion/year would be easy to hit since the drug companies are getting a lot more than $50/month).

The federal government starting paying for a lot of the calories that made today’s older Americans fat when it created the food stamp program, now “SNAP”, in the 1960s. By paying for weight loss drugs, therefore, we have a complete SNAP-to-GLP-1 circle of life. What about rewriting the Disney classic song to fit the current situation? ChatGPT refuses to do this, claiming that it would be a violation of Disney’s copyright to create some new lyrics for their existing melody. Grok apparently doesn’t care.

Circle of Life (SNAP Edition)

(Zulu-style chant, sung with dramatic flair)
Nants ingonyama bagithi Baba
Sithi uhmm… SNAP-onyama!

Here comes the benefit, father
Oh yes, it’s the EBT card
A feast we’re gonna fund here
A burger, a soda, a leopard… wait, that’s just the spots on the fries

Verse 1
From the day we arrive on the planet
And blinking, step into the store
There’s more to eat than can ever be eaten
More to buy than can ever be bought
There’s far too much junk food to take in here
More calories than can ever be burned
But the government check rolling high
Through the welfare sky
Keeps the great and small on the endless round

Chorus
It’s the Circle of Life
And it moves us all
Taxpayers fund the snacks
Then the drugs for the sprawl
Through obesity and hope
Through waistlines and scope
‘Til we find our place
On the Ozempic path unwinding
In the Circle
The Circle of Life

Verse 2
Some of us eat the surplus cheese
While others pay the mounting fees
We are all connected in the great chain
From the SNAP aisle to the pharmacy lane
The taxpayer’s wallet gives what it can
To the processed foods and the injection plan
It’s the wheel of fortune, it’s the leap of fate
It’s the government gate… that swings both ways

Chorus
It’s the Circle of Life
And it moves us all
Through despair and hope
Through faith and love… and rebates
‘Til we find our place
On the path unwinding
In the Circle
The Circle of Life

Bridge/Outro
Wegovy rising like the morning sun
GLP-1 flowing when the damage is done
From the grocery cart to the needle’s prick
The federal cycle does the trick
Nants ingonyama… SNAP-onyama!
It’s the Circle… of Life!

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100th birthday of the man who made the X-ray diffraction image of crystallized DNA that helped Watson and Crick

As part of James Watson‘s continued cancelation, it is conventional to credit Rosalind Franklin with having figured out the structure of DNA from an X-ray diffraction image that she made prior to dying of cancer. In fact, Photo 51 was created by Raymond Gosling, born exactly 100 years ago today.

Wall Street Journal, “Celebrating the Forgotten Man of the DNA Quest” (2012):

But it was [Gosling], supervised by Maurice Wilkins, who in 1950 first took an X-ray photograph of a DNA fiber, which he had wound around a bent paper clip. Of that moment, he writes: “Those discrete diffraction spots emerging on the film in the developing dish was a truly eureka moment. Maurice and I drank several glasses of his sherry.”

It was this photo that electrified Dr. Watson when he saw it presented by Dr. Wilkins at a conference in Naples, Italy. If, as the image implied, the gene had a regular structure, then elucidating that structure might explain its properties. And this quest brought Dr. Watson to (then) Mr. Crick, whom he persuaded to moonlight from the study of proteins and help him tackle DNA.

The WSJ describes Photo 51 as having been a collaborative effort between Franklin and Gosling, so the attribution solely to Rosalind Franklin isn’t completely baseless. ChatGPT: “Franklin was expert at getting DNA fibers into a state suitable for X-ray crystallography, especially controlling humidity so DNA formed the “B form,” the hydrated form that produced Photo 51.”

A standard example of de-Watsonification, “8 Female Scientists Whose Discoveries Were Credited to Men” (Biography.com):

Born in 1920 in London, Rosalind Franklin was a chemist, X-ray crystallographer and leading molecular biologist who discovered the structure of DNA.

Note that in the article about nerds not being properly credited for their nerdism, Raymond Gosling isn’t credited.

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Quantifying the understatement of inflation due to the Owners’ Equivalent Rent fantasy (Wall Street Journal data)

The cost of owning a house in the U.S. can go up 1,000% and it would have no effect on the government’s official inflation rate, updated this morning to 3.5 percent. That’s because the cost of an owned house is included in CPI by asking homeowners, who aren’t landlords, how much they think they would get if they became landlords (usually not much because nobody wants to move into a single-family house with a one-year lease and then get kicked out at the end becuase the owner decided to do something else with the property). BLS:

The expenditure weight in the CPI market basket for OER is based on the following question that the CE Survey asks of consumers who own their primary residence: “If someone were to rent your home today, how much do you think it would rent for monthly, unfurnished and without utilities?”

ChatGPT says that OER rose by 31% from year-end 2019 to year-end 2025 (citing FRED).

What happened to actual costs? Nobody knows because the government doesn’t bother to measure them (see above). The Wall Street Journal, however, has a recent article on an attempt to quantify the rise in costs. It’s 39% rather than the BLS fantasy number of 31% if one considers someone who bought a house in 2025 vs. in 2019:

OER is about 26% of CPI so the effect of using OER instead of actual costs has been to understate inflation by about 0.3% per year over the 2019-2025 period coverd. That doesn’t sound like a lot, but it is about one-sixth of the Fed’s 2% inflation target (how are brightest technocrats doing on that, by the way? https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/14/business/economy/inflation-cpi.html has a chart showing six straight years of failure to meet this target; six years is “transitory”?).

Related:

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New York Times summarizes Lindsey Graham’s 71-year life as “Trump ally” while reminding us that the true American heroes aren’t, strictly speaking, American

Today’s New York Times…

A Mexican national whom we are informed was shot at random by ICE (they were looking for an undocument migrant and shot the unfortunate Mr. Lorenzo Salgado Araujo for no reason and, as it happened, Mr. Araujo was also an undocumented migrant (what are the odds in a country where we’re informed that only a tiny percentage of residents are undocumented migrants?)):

Lindsey Graham, whose entire life can be reduced to, simply, “Trump Ally”:

Democrat connections on Facebook are filling up their feeds with glee regarding Senator Graham’s death. Some examples:

“I’ve never wished a man dead, but I have read some obituaries with great pleasure.”
— Clarence Darrow, “The Story of My Life”, 1932

According to Dante, Lindsay’s final destination would be Antenora.

X users who previously expressed support for the Gazans and hatred of Israel are also happy. Example from someone affiliated with the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee:

The mere existence of an American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee seems like something that evolved during Lindsey Graham’s adulthood (until Hart-Celler in 1965, Arabs generally weren’t eligible to immigrate to the U.S.). Let’s look at what else has changed since Lindsey Graham was born in 1955.

Lindsey Graham served in the USAF for 33 years, including in Iraq and Afghanistan, and, unusually, did not become disabled by his work at a desk. VA Benefits cost $4.5 billion in 1955. Adjusted for inflation, that’s about 55 billion 2026 mini-dollars. That’s during a period where nearly 100% of American men were veterans of three brutal wars (WWI, WWII, and Korean). The population was smaller because we hadn’t discovered the miracle of open borders and, thus, the U.S. was home to only about 22 million living veterans in 1955. Today, VA benefits, not including military pensions earned via length of service, cost about $440 billion. There are only about 16 million living veterans and a high enough percentage of them are classified as “disabled”, thus forcing taxpayers to pay out more than $200 billion in disability compensation, e.g., to Graham Platner in Maine. The average American who actually pays any significant federal income tax will work approximately 2-3 hours per week to fund payments and services to veterans, despite the fact that it is tough to think of any war that we’ve won since Korea. ChatGPT: “real federal spending per veteran has risen by substantially more than a factor of eight”.

(Note that we will soon be spending more on disability payments to veterans than the Chinese spend on their entire active-duty military. The majority of disabled veterans were never in combat so we can’t blame our enemies becoming tougher for this epidemic of disability. A majority of veterans who left the U.S. military during the Biden-Harris administration were classified as disabled. There are some tough-to-quantify costs of these disability ratings. Veterans who receive TDIU (Total Disability based on Individual Unemployability) can’t work without risking the loss of the taxpayer cash. Veterans who are rated 100 percent disabled, such as Graham Platner, pay no property tax on a primary residence in Florida (imagine if this fearless fighter were to move into Ron DeSantis terrirtory!).)

Lindsey Graham started out wanted to give nearly every undocumented migrant in the U.S. “amnesty” and a passport. The percentage of immigrants in the U.S. has risen from about 5 percent when Lindsey Graham was born to at least 15 percent today (Pew). If we were to look at “immigrants plus children of recent immigrants” the growth would be much more dramatic due to the U.S. having closed its borders in 1924. If we corrected Pew’s numbers with the 2X likely population of undocumented migrants that Yale found, the percentage of the U.S. population that was foreign-born would likely be around 20 percent (and maybe 30 percent for immigrants plus children of recent immigrants since immigrants have higher fertility than the native-born Americans whom they are definitely not “replacing”).

Not in any way related to this enrichment via immigration, the cost of an existing single-family house (i.e., not one in some exurb) relative to median income, is now 2-3X what it was in 1955, relative to median male worker’s earnings, depending on how one adjusts for square footage.

Graham was, like all members of Congress, responsible for setting federal spending levels. Federal debt was about 65 percent of GDP in 1955, not too long after massive borrowing to fund WWII. Today it is 125 percent of GDP. Federal spending has grown from 16.5 percent of GDP to about 23 percent (don’t forget state and local as well!). ChatGPT: “The decline in military spending since 1955 was more than fully absorbed by the growth of Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, veterans’ benefits, other transfers, and interest on the debt.”

Loosely related…

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Jones Act Port: Victoria, British Columbia

Due to the magic of the Jones Act, it would be illegal for a German-built ship such as the magnificent Norwegian Joy to do an Alaska cruise from Seattle and stop only at U.S. ports, even if operated by a U.S.-based cruise line and staffed with an American crew. One perverse consequence of the Act is, therefore, that U.S. law requires all of the passengers to be unloaded at a Canadian port and spend their money in Canada rather than in the U.S. for at least one day. This turns the trip into an international one, which can legally be run in a foreign-made ship.

Victoria, British Columbia, is getting enormously rich as a conseqeunce of this 1920 law. We stopped there at the end of May 2026.

Walking toward town, Fishermen’s Wharf:

We summoned an Uber for the 30-minute drive to Butchart Gardens, created circa 1906 by the wife of a cement baron in his former limestone quarry and run today by the family.

There’s something for everyone here, including fountains, totem poles, restaurants, a carousel, etc.

The shocking price of $44/adult ($31 in USD; 10 years of supercharged immigration, more carefully selected for skills and education than immigrants to the U.S., has made the Canadian economy so strong that the exchange rate vs. the USD has collapsed) doesn’t keep the place from being crowded on a sunny Sunday. They sell a membership to locals and the gardens are dog-friendly so maybe that’s part of it, but most of the visitors seemed to be tourists. It was challenging at times to get through the rose garden.

It all started with a Japanese garden in 1906:

Why is it virtually impossible to buy stone lanterns in the U.S.? Here are some beautiful ones, including an unusual one that is made, perhaps, from concrete logs?

I asked ChatGPT “Why aren’t Japanese-style stone lanterns made in China and shipped to U.S. garden stores by container/truck and then sold at a reasonable cost?” Our AI overlord says that the wholesale cost in China might be around $100, but…(1) containers are weight-limited, (2) “Breakage and missing parts are a killer”, (3) the port-to-store or port-to-house shipping is going to be expensive for a heavy object, 4) #tariffs #blameTrump, (5) stone lanterns don’t sell fast enough for a garden center, (6) Americans are tasteless and will accept a cast concrete or “cast stone” substitute.

Japanese Style in North Carolina seems to bring in the real deal for $1,000-$2,500, but they weigh 300-650 lbs. and then shipping is ruinous on top of that.

Maybe Optimus can learn to make stone lanterns?

I don’t dream of the winter that makes these rhododendrons and Japanese maples possible, but they are beautiful in spring!

Inspiration:

What do you get when you mix some of the New Canadians’ food traditions with Legacy Canada? Butter chicken poutine ($26 in fake money):

Artur, an immigrant from Turkey, had taken us out to the gardens. Wasim, an immigrant from northern India, brought us back to downtown Victoria.

The fountain across from the British Columbia Parliament Buildings celebrates the provinces and territories of Canada, which won its independence without a traitorous rebellion, unlike some countries…

We didn’t invest in the guided tour of the provincial parliament since, among other things, the idea of the capital not being in Vancouver seems ridiculous.

The Empress, a railroad-built hotel, is reached by walking past a statute of Emily Carr, a Canadian artist and writer unknown to Americans. She is the perfect inspiration for today’s immigration enthusiasts since she never got married or had children (though she had a dog Billie and a pet monkey Woo). Certainly she’s been replaced many times over!

At the opposite edge of the hotel’s block:

A passion for history required that we visit Rogers’ Chocolates, founded in 1885 by a man born in Massachusetts. This particular store dates to 1903.

Next stop: Munro’s Books.

Readers can perhaps guess that I headed straight for the children’s section.

Back in the adult area:

Of course, the staff was masked as well as allergic to cinnamon (see above):

The historic Chinatown surely has some great food, but we’d already stocked up on poutine at the garden.

Puzzle Lab was our favorite store. Laser cutting the “jigsaw” wooden puzzles enables them to cost a fraction of what a Stave costs (What would I do if Elizabeth Warren would follow through on her promise to steal Elon Musk’s $1 trillion and then give it to me (the second part isn’t included in her promise, but it seems only fair)? Order a bunch of Stave puzzles, which are perhaps $3,500 each.).

As part of an outdoor visitor orientation map, the government-run museum acknowledges that it is on stolen land:

Thanks to the miracle of spectacular immigration-fueled population growth, the city will be approving the replacement of an unsightly light-hogging single-family home with a beautiful 6-story apartment building:

At the extreme western end of the Trans-Canada Highway, there is a Mile 0 sign and a poignant statue of Terry Fox who tried to push through his cancer and run the entire distance. He died at 22. “Dreams are made possible if you try.” Well, I guess that’s true when you consider what happens to those who don’t try.

Then a walk back to the ship with views of the Olympic Mountains across the water, most famously traversed by enricher Ahmed Ressam in 1999.

Was ChatGPT helpful in planning this stop?

With 8 AM–6 PM, don’t burn the day on Butchart Gardens unless you particularly want gardens; it is farther from the cruise port. For your family, I’d walk from Ogden Point along the breakwater/Dallas Road waterfront to Beacon Hill Park, then continue to the Inner Harbour, Parliament buildings, and back. Victoria Trails describes Ogden Point Breakwater as a walk near the cruise terminal with harbor and Strait views. Independent cruise guides estimate the Empress/Inner Harbour area at about 1.5 miles from the cruise dock, so this is very doable as a half-day walk.

No. Butchart Gardens is a work of genius. Downtown Victoria is reasonably nice, but crowded with tourists and not filled with important architecture. Buying 3 lbs. of chocolate at Rogers’ and then reading through a stack of 2SLGBTQQIA+ books at Munro’s would be delightful, but doesn’t fill an entire day. ChatGPT frightened us further in a follow-up by saying that we wouldn’t be able to get an Uber back from Butchart. We got one within about 3 minutes (Wasim was dropping someone else off).

Related:

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A group of humans with a lower IQ collects a smaller share of income

“The Post‑COVID Decline in the Labor Share” (by a group of Federal Reserve Bank economists) shows that, as the percentage of immigrants in the U.S. population increased (we opened our borders starting in 1965, but the effects were gradual at first), the percentage of income captured by labor decreased:

We’re informed that immigrants are better workers than native-born Americans and also that IQ has been falling in the U.S. for the past 25 years or so (closely coinciding with the slide in labor share).

Even if American IQ doesn’t continue to fall, if Americans continue to become relatively less capable than machines every year shouldn’t we expect the labor share to continue to fall? A robot or NVIDIA server is a capital investment, after all, and the fruits of the work by the robot/server would, absent a heroic transferist government, ordinarily end up primarily in the hands of the investors who paid for it.

Llosely related…

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After 17 years, something new from Garmin in retrofit glass panels

Seventeen years ago:

These low-resolution (1280×768) displays were tweaked during coronapanic by adding touch sensitvity (a mixed blessing in a machine that is subject to turbulence), but essentially Garmin has been offering the same system for 17 years… until today. The web site for Garmin AXIS doesn’t offer any resolution spec in pixels, which is disturbing, and it continues to mention panning and zooming (not the best activity for a pilot trying to control aircraft attitude!). Maybe Garmin actually hasn’t caught up to 1080p, a place that HTC managed to get for its Android phones in 2012.

Why does an airplane need box after box of avionics given that a modern smartphone has an AHRS, a GPS, multiple radios, a high-res display, a massive database of charts, and nearly everything else that anyone would want in an aircraft panel? I haven’t made it all the way through the 23-minute launch video, but I don’t think resolution is mentioned:

For those of us limping along with late-1990s Garmin 430s, the beauty of this new Garmin system is that the capabilities of the insanely expensive and absurdly low-res GTN750Xi nav/com (about $25,000 installed; offers to show approach plates, but they’re unreadable) are folded into the back of the display. It looks as though the financial savings could be significant. The PFD with all of the features of the GTN750Xi is priced at roughly the same cost as the GTN750Xi. From Sarasota:

Presumably two of these “fattened displays” would be required for a Cirrus or similar “real IFR” aircraft so as to have a backup GPS, 2nd COM, etc.

This is, of course, ugly news for Brand A. Avidyne only a year ago got its retrofit reasonably-modern larger-but-low-res PFD/MFD certified. The Avidyne system needs high-cost high-bulk connector-rich separate nav/coms, which Garmin has now folded into the backs of their PFD/MFD.

Update: I found the resolution in pixels in the manual. It is 1080p, 1920×1080 pixels, a huge upgrade from the G500TXi and also much higher resolution than Avidyne’s Vantage. If 1080p has arrived in $60,000 aircraft panels 21 years after arriving in consumer living rooms and 14 years after arriving in consumers’ pockets (HTC Android phone), does that mean the dawn of 8K TVs is near? It’s tough to imagine that aviation isn’t at least two generations behind what consumers can buy for $500.

Amazon will deliver an 8K TV right now for $2300:

If we consider $1,000 to be the post-Bidenflation equivalent of $500, maybe it will be 2027 before 8K TVs, two generations ahead of these $20,000 Garmin displays, have come down enough to create a conventional split in price. (How much more general and video-related computing power do we think an 8K TV has compared to all of the computers in a glass panel aircraft put together?)

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