Ok using your Google analogy - there's a reason why "librarian" is a job and "Googler" isn't. One requires years of skill and practice to interpret a request and find the right information and do all sorts of things, and the other is someone kinda bashing keys to make Google give them what they want. You wouldn't put them in remotely the same class
Squids
There is a very real chance they spent more time on this piece than other artists they were up against spent on theirs. I generate thousands of images a month
.... you've never actually made art, have you? The sort of stuff that you enter into contests takes months to make, from the actual painting to rough sketches to reference gathering, and that's just the basics
Clicking a button a thousand times isn't really comparable
Rival developer? Please, I'm pretty sure the call is coming from within the house here - this is exactly the sort of thing 4chan would do because a game asked them pronouns or gave them a wetsuit skin instead of a bikini one
Hey as someone who kinda grew up in that scenario, I really reccomend you show your kid what a windows dual boot is
Your kid doesn't exist in a vacuum. They have friends and inevitably your kid's going to be in a situation where their friends are like "hey, want to play this game with us?" And they can't because it's got a kernel anti-cheat that doesn't work with Linux. They're going to try and get into a hobby, only to find that the software everyone uses doesn't work on Linux and the alternatives that do are badly maintained and frustrating to work with. They're going to encounter a programme they need for school that just straight up does not work on Linux.
Sure you might be able to find a work around to all these things but like, can your kid? Because I speak from experience when I say that feeling like you have to be constantly running to your dad every time something doesn't work doesn't foster a sense of mastery, it makes you feel like you can't do anything on your computer because you're too small and dumb.
The teacher probably isn't "afraid" of the Linux box, they're probably frustrated that they don't know what's going on and can't help if something goes wrong. The programmes they'll probably teach your kid aren't a perfect 1-to-1 match to their Linux alternatives and they'll be left sitting in the back confused and upset while everyone else is learning about stuff in word and excel that you can't do in libre Office. You're not going to be known as the cool hacker dad, you're going to be put in the same category as the crunchy mum who doesn't let their kid eat sugar and needlessly restricts something that's just so petty to the layman.
There's also the fact that later on if your kid wants to certain things, either as a hobby or just with their friends, they're SOL because they don't run on Linux and the FOSS alternatives are awful and would scare them away. Kid wants to play a game with Kernel level anti-cheat with their friends? Nope doesn't work with Linux, unless they want to risk getting banned. Want to try your hand at video making? Good luck using obscure software that may or may not spontaneously crash on you and getting cameras to talk to your computer properly. Get a new toy that talks to your computer? Ha ha nope in your dreams
Sure you might be able to fix those problems, but can your kid? Can your kid do these things by themself and foster a sense of understanding and mastery over Linux, or are they going to grow up thinking that they can't do anything on their own computer because they constantly have to call over their dad for help?
Growing up my house was a Linux household and the first thing I was taught how to do was how to dual-boot into windows because letting me play The Sims and have fun was a little more important than ideology wars
Not quite star trek, but I do know that in The Man From UNCLE Illya Kuryakin, the Russian/USSR operative working for UNCLE was so popular that in the second season he got promoted from side character to full on protangonist and that aired a year or two before star trek. So if an explicitly USSR aligned spy could get that popular to the point the producers felt comfortable making him a main character, I imagine one from the far off future where Russia is more of a off hand mention in comparison would be even less controversial
Funnily enough the 2015 movie version of him is way more critical of the Soviets than the show made in the height of the cold war ever was
Demons are real and they live inside your computer delivering your emails and internet. Before computers they used to screw around with physicists and mathematians and break their theories but now they're too busy to do that anymore.
Not religious in the slightest, my dad just saw me asking what Beastie on his BSD machine's screensaver was and decided to fuck with me when he realised I didn't know what a demon (in any sense of the word) was
No it's not milkshakes have like ice cream and stuff in them that make them fun - this is just cold really sweet flavoured iced coffee
It's probably got so much sugar in it because it's iced - the colder things are, the harder it is for you to taste the sugar in them
Ice cream has a lot of sugar in it - if you were to try and drink the base fresh off the stove, you'd be met with a tooth rottingly sweet custard. However once it's been brought down to -15° suddenly it's not only bearable it's nice
Also that's a big fucking cup. Like nearly a litre big. Who in their right mind is drinking that all by themselves?
Otherwise you have to find ways to explain stuff to the audience when the characters grew up in that world and should already know all about it, so don't need to discuss things.
...you mean worldbuild organically like any other story set in a universe that isn't our own? Countless shows and stories have been doing that for centuries, why should anime get a special little exception?
...in a fight right?
I'd also add that like, for a lot of Scandinavia heat pumps work just fine? Like does America just have some really bad heat pumps or something?
I think the only reason why you wouldn't install one here (aside from obvious cost issues) would be if you already have a robust heating system built into your home, like a hot water system. And if that's the case, you can use the heatpump of the earth - geothermal! Use the power of the earth's molten core to heat and cool your home!
(... geothermal isn't as ubiquitous as I make it sound it's just, really fucking cool)