LycanGalen

joined 1 year ago
[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Pirated games can be one or several of the following:

  • a means of participating in a chosen culture when players can't afford/justify the price tag (one Nintendo game now costs the same as a week's worth of groceries for two people where I live)
  • a form of archive because game publishers are notorious for killing games
  • a form of backup because things happen to disks/cartridges
  • a form of backup because servers go down
  • a form of backup because not everyone's internet is reliable
  • a means making the game more accessible by adding features (eg. the option of infinite lives/health for someone with muscular dystrophy)
  • a form of protest over ever-increasing prices at the same time as ever-increasing layoffs, and ever-decreasing quality.

More directly relevant to you: the money you give Nintendo goes to their legal teams, to continue to find loopholes around the protections you have. They're the ones fighting the "Stop Killing Games" movement. Nintendo recently won a lawsuit against 1fichier in France for hosting emulated games. It has been marked as a "significant" win against any level of piracy in the EU. Nintendo is continually working to make sure that despite living in the EU, you won't be fine regardless. Your purchase directly funds that.

Maybe you have no intention of playing pirated games, but I hope you can appreciate that this is larger than just some teenager feeling powerful because they stole something?

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

While I agree with you that there can be a risk of skinny people missing diagnosis because they're "healthy", I think you're overestimating how well fat people are treated in healthcare. If a patient is fat, there is no further testing done. They're told to lose weight whether healthy or not, and regardless of whether it's relevant to their concerns or not. Obesity is still used as a cutoff to deny access to surgeries that will measurably improve their health, despite there often being no increased risk of complication.

As I said, I don't disagree with your issue about skinny causing medical neglect: the way our society, including medicine, blindly follows weight as the only thing that matters (examples above for fat individuals, telling skinny people with terminal illnesses they look great for having lost weight, amputating functional organs to cause malnourishment and by extension weight loss, even to folks who are arguably healthy and in a mid to low BMI range...) Is detrimental to everyone's well being.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 4 points 2 weeks ago

Telecoms tradespeople in Canada are paid like absolute garbage. They used to be (and some still are, but they're dwindling) part of the steelworker's union, but they were hit hard by union busting, so now the majority are contractors who get paid by the job. This means a full 5 hour run of fibre to get a home set up pays the same as plugging a single wire in at the CO. But it's luck of tue draw, and with the telcos cutting corners on everything, the "plug in a wire" jobs are like unicorns.

Plus the rack people have all been laid off, so the guys have to do that job on top of their own, and the IT side has all been offshored to folks who are not trained or paid enough to be competent. So what should be a 45 minute job that they could do 11 of in a single day now takes 2 hours, meaning they're only getting paid for 4.

It would not surprise me if other blue collar industries started following suit.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

They're saying they'd rather have had the money that went towards the purchases of switch 2s left in the form of cash, rather than spent for them.

It's a relevant critique because with their latest releases, Nintendo's doing the same 'cost increase to the detriment of employees and customers' dance as the other big gaming corpos.

A person can agree something is better than the horrible baseline, and still bring up a topic of discussion on something that isn't great.

Also, re: 2 weeks paid time off; look outside of 'Murica once in a while. The global average of paid days off is ~25. So 2 weeks, while lovely for America, is below normal.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 5 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I wish we had a Canadian option. In the meantime, I'll use Steam for reference, and buy on GOG.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 0 points 1 month ago

It is a personal account, as that is her personal name, -and- she is the President. Both things can be true. Stephen King uses his personal profile in a casual format with quips and jokes, random posts about the weather, what he's doing today, retooting fan art, and correcting idiots; because that's what he wants to share, just like I do with my profile. Yes, he has to be mindful of what he posts because the internet never forgets; and so do I. My posts can have real world repercussions for my job, or business just like King or Whittaker. The only difference is viewership.

Regardless, if I accommodate your argument and focus on posts from "official" accounts, Wendy's has used their accounts to troll for at least a decade. They have established informal engagement as a legitimate customer engagement strategy and it has been adopted by marketing teams the world over. Whittaker's interaction has garnered hundreds of comments in this niche thread alone: hundreds of impressions of the Signal brand. You are arguably the only user who negatively responded to her. From a branding perspective, those are phenomenal Results.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 13 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I found the response humorous. I'd imagine if she felt this was actually important to address (rather than some idiot spouting BS) there would be a post from the Signal account, rather than her personal profile, and it would look very different.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

A hyphen or dot couldn't serve the same function as a carriage return here? (Not being a dick; genuine question)

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I would rotate the text 90 degrees so that it has the full length of the top tab, that should give you more room to work, and most humans can read rotated text.

Another suggestion would be to try a different font that works with the printing limitations: something curved like Exo 2 might be a little less of a fight.

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

Covid-19 causes permanent damage, and immune dysregulation in every person who is infected, each time they are infected, so it's no surprise other viruses are now having larger impacts.

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/quirks/beyond-long-covid-1.7485888

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Nope, measles is up to six times more contagious (UNICEF measures it as only two times more infectious). It doesn't help that the world in general has gotten really lax about how dangerous Covid is, particularly with the latest variants, so our baseline is off.

https://www.med.ubc.ca/news/5-things-you-didnt-but-should-know-about-measles/

https://www.unicef.org/uzbekistan/en/stories/how-dangerous-measles

[–] LycanGalen@lemmy.world -1 points 1 month ago

I agree with you about feeling no pity for the tech bros. However, a big appeal of AI for them is elimination of employees. And that's going to hurt more regular folks who did not sign up for AI on a much more noticeable level. I dont think any nation is set up to handle the level of unemployment that's on the horzon. So ignoring the environmental impacts of LLM/AI servers; let's get national food, shelter, and healthcare systems in place, and then I'd be all for letting the venture capitalists shove their dicks in blenders.

 

I was about to pull the trigger and buy a System 76 Pangolin when the trade BS started. As far as I can tell, there are no Canadian manufacturers (or repackagers like System 76), so I'm looking for suggestions. My preference would be Canadian, but happy to consider anything non-US.

I prefer to buy hardware that can last - my phone is nearly 10 years old, and my tower PC is almost 20, with various upgrades over time. I know that laptops aren't as good for upgrades, but some sturdiness, and non-soldered RAM would be appreciated.

I'm looking for a 15"/16" laptop that plays well with Linux (I like Pop!OS, but fine to migrate) it would be primarily for office stuff, but with decent enough iGPU that I can do basic graphic work, and play some indy games. I'd like something that generally doesn't sound like a helicopter when I use it. 1-2Tb SDD, and 32 GB RAM. ~$2500 CAD is my max.

I looked at Lenovo, but they're getting expensive, and I'm not sure whether they go through the US prior to hitting Canada or not.

Thanks in advance!

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