themeatbridge

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themeatbridge,

Wasn’t that the point of the ending?

themeatbridge,

Any apocalyptic or post apocalyptic that is supposed to end on a hopeful note.

themeatbridge,

Most critics are frustrated artists.

themeatbridge,

You’re permitted to speak your mind, as long as your rhetoric does not become conduct, but I find your ideas despicable and you are a pox on the University.

themeatbridge,

Wait I though we were at Greg’s house tonight. Damn it, I told you all I’m not on the group text, guys.

themeatbridge,

Narrator: there are many reasons not to do that.

themeatbridge,

Seems like it’s being hugged to death at the moment.

themeatbridge,

Easy on the revisionist history, there. Valve’s previous attempt to introduce paid mods broke the existing mod system, and took the lion’s share of the profits for Valve and Bethesda. The math on how much modders would make was absurdly low compared to the effort they put in, and most of the available mods were built on a community’s worth of contributions. There was no curation, no protections for creators or consumers, and the door was left wide open for scammers and charletains to sell other people’s work.

It was a terrible plan.

This isn’t about players demanding work for free. Players bought the game (sometimes more than once) and many of the mods fixed significant bugs and problems. Mods provided ui improvements and new content to keep the game fresh.

Quite the contrary, this is Bethesda capitalizing on the free labor provided by the modding community over the years. This new system has already broken SKSE, upon which hundreds of additional mods are built. The SKSE team has already patched the problem, but that’s just one free mod. Who compensates them for fixing the thing Bethesda broke?

People who didn’t live through it and only read news articles are going to get the impression that players revolted in 2015 because everybody wants a free lunch. If it was just unhappy freeloaders, why would they have pulled the feature so quickly? Surely losing the choosy beggars all at once would not have had any effect on revenue, so how can that possibly explain the unmitigated PR disaster and public apology?

themeatbridge,

PS2 Shinobi was great. They should just update that with new levels and better graphics.

I’m holding out for a Kid Chameleon game, though.

themeatbridge,

I don’t even understand how/why this game needs an online mode? There are only four playable characters. Give me four player couch coop and an optional online mode, and it will be the only game four people can play together in a room.

themeatbridge,

Wasn’t that like six years ago, though? At the time, it looked like a beautiful game. Still looks nice, when it loads, but it’s not fun to play.

themeatbridge,

Like when Aunt Linda got you Superman 64 for Christmas, despite the fact you had an xbox.

themeatbridge,

I’m baffled that some people update their hardware before it stops working.

But then I just keep playing old games that run on my system, so I’m probably not the target demographic.

themeatbridge,

Properly stored, that tape will last forever.

themeatbridge,

More the former than the latter, because I have the same attitude towards the software, too. I don’t need to be able to run the newest stuff because the oldest stuff works just fine. I’m not doing CPU or GPU intensive stuff, and I try to run lightweight software that doesn’t bog down my computer.

I can absolutely see how that would be different if I were gaming, video editing, or doing any sort of data modeling.

themeatbridge,

I don’t even remember that episode. Time for a rewatch!

themeatbridge,

Zooming in on the photo, they look unused. It looks like the edges flair out, which is how you put it on the bottle before you press it onto the bottle.

I would imagine that it wouldn’t be difficult to press used caps back into a useable shape, but you then have to wonder if they are clean and not too weaked by use.

There is also a rubbery seal (silicone?) on a lot of caps, and I’d be worried that the seal would be damaged in the recycling.

themeatbridge,

Headline reads like Mad Libs.

themeatbridge,

As trailers go, that was underwhelming for a variety of reasons. The graphics looked stilted and last gen, the tiny bit of voice acting wasn’t great, and the music was weird and unappealing. There was no action, no ambiance, nothing to be enthusiastic about except someone is making a Blade game that will probably come out before the movie.

Obviously there will be work done on the graphics, and there’s plenty of time to tweak the voice acting and the soundtrack. So it’s not at all fair to judge the game on a teaser. But then, this is the teaser they made to promote the game, and that doesn’t instill a lot of confidence.

themeatbridge,

There are a few episodes where being trans is almost the entire premise.

There are two different “Gender Bender” episodes where Bender is either cross dressing to act as a heel in pro wrestling, or surgically altered to become a fembot and compete in sports.

There is another episode where an alien removes the gender differences for the crew, and then changes the gender of the crew. They shoot a saucy pin-up calendar.

And then there’s the Dungeons and Dragons episodes where Hermes is a hermaphrodite centaur.

Oh, and the mind swapping episode where everybody changes brains, but that’s more Freaky Friday than gender swapping.

themeatbridge,

If you leave them out in your car on a hot summer day, the wrapper is basically that weird alien plant sample.

themeatbridge,

Yep. I’d say 12 is a good age to start, because most will be able to read and understand government.

themeatbridge,

Depends on whether you’re a computer or a mathematician.

2(2+2) is equivalent to 2 x (2+2), but they are not equal. Using parenthesis implicitly groups the 2(2+2) as part of the paretheses function. A computer will convert 2(4) to 2 x 4 and evaluate the expression left to right, but this is not what it written. We learned in elementary school in the 90s that if you had a fancy calculator with parentheses, you could fool it because it didn’t know about implicit association. Your calculator doesn’t know the difference between 2 x (2+2) and 2(2+2), but mathematicians do.

Of course, modern mathematicians work primarily in computers, where the legacy calculator functions have become standard and distinctions like this have become trivial.

themeatbridge,

I’m old but I’m not that old.

The author of that article makes the mistake of youth, that because things are different now that the change was sudden and universal. They can find evidence that things were different 100 years ago, but 50 years ago there were zero computers in classrooms, and 30 years ago a graphing calculator was considered advanced technology for an elementary age student. We were taught the old math because that is what our teachers were taught.

Early calculators couldn’t (or didn’t) parse edge cases, so they would get this equation wrong. Somewhere along the way, it was decided that it would be easier to change how the equation was interpreted rather than reprogram every calculator on earth, which is a rational decision I think. But that doesn’t make the old way wrong, anymore than it makes cursive writing the wrong way to shape letters.

themeatbridge,

I agree with you, but a baby can’t read a ballot or pull a lever. Help is always available to anyone who asks, so I suppose we could just eliminate the age requirement altogether and let anyone who is able to register go to the polls.

I would be concerned about a certain type of person trying to make as many little voters as they can crank out, but I suppose some people do that anyway and just wait until they turn 18.

themeatbridge,

Why not? Have you talked to a twelve year old recently?

themeatbridge,

An illiterate or blind adult can ask for help. A poll worker will read the ballot or provide a braille version to help them, and will fill out the ballot with them if requested.

I’m still agreeing with you, you’ve convinced me that any age barrier is arbitrary and hypocritical.

As for registration being a hurdle, the courts have long held that the effort to be registered is minimal, as again there are resources to help people get registered. There are outreach programs, and you can actually go to your local post office or dmv and they will help you register. Children would have an even easier time, since anyone in school could have a teacher or school staff help them.

Children are particularly beholden to their parents for support, though, and by “certain type” I mean the type of person who thinks that having a child is a means to an end. There’s a whole spectrum of quality parenting decisions, but as a general rule, anyone who is having more kids to have more votes is probably a bad parent.

themeatbridge,

The best argument against democracy is a five minute conversation with the average voter. Is a 12 year old actually worse in any way?

themeatbridge,

Because…

themeatbridge,

I know 12 year olds that are working part time to help raise siblings, and I know 30 year olds that have never left their hometown or read a book that wasn’t required in school. Old people with lots of life experience don’t understand data privacy and think climate science is a fad. Young people have a unique perspective on issues like education, social security, and economic investment in the future. Why is that life experience less valid at 12 than at 18? Why is life experience necessary at all?

Why does intelligence factor into your objection? We don’t ask adults to pass a test, nor should we. While I object to you using “retarded” to call children stupid, your slur undercuts your own argument. Adults with intellectual disabilities are able to vote without any obstacles or tests. The average 12 year old is perfectly capable of understanding complex topics and making informed decisions. They may not make the decisions we would like them to make, and they may regret their decisions, but again how is that different from any adult?

themeatbridge,

I’m happy to debate this with you, but that’s the second time you’ve used a slur disparaging people with disabilites. Hope your day is as pleasant as you are.

themeatbridge,

It is an outdated term for intellectually disabled, and using it when you mean “stupid” is offensive. Intellectual disability is not the same as intelligence. Calling someone disabled as an insult is offensive. People with disabilities are not lesser than you, and it is the height of arrogance to look down upon people who overcome adversity to educate themselves while simultaneously being objectively wrong and demonstrably ignorant on the subject.

themeatbridge,

No, because they aren’t intellectually disabled, and calling someone intellectually disabled should not be something you say to insult people. The only difference is that you’re not using a slur to do it.

themeatbridge,

I bet that 8 year old would have an easier time trading a nice bottle of booze.

Seriously, though, my parents would have been pissed if I traded away a gift someone gave me. We did trade stuff all the time (mostly matchbox cars and baseball cards) but “I got this for Christmas” meant that it was off limits for trading.

themeatbridge,

We have a secret santa where the rule is the gift has to be unneeded. We are all adults with jobs who can buy ourselves things we need. The best gifts are things people want but wouldn’t buy for themselves. If it’s not frivolous, it’s something they probably will get themselves.

themeatbridge,

My nose was entirely blocked yesterday, and I was sitting here reading this meme realizing I was taking it for granted.

themeatbridge,

Same goes for home repair. Learn to spackle and patch drywall, change a doorknob, install a toilet, snake a drain, and replace a capacitor or heating element in your hvac system. These are things anyone can learn to do with minimal tools and inexpensive parts, but will cost hundreds to hire a professional.

themeatbridge,

Ymmv by state.

themeatbridge,

Electric heaters may actually cost more in electric bills than you would spend on heating. It depends on the type of heating and the size of your space, but something like natural gas might cost less to keep the whole house at 65 degrees, rather than trying to warm a single room from 45 degrees with a space heater.

themeatbridge,

Oh no! Homeless people are sheltering in unoccupied real estate without going to prison! They should just die outside to protect the investors who rely on homelessness to maintain property values!

How did Lemmy World become the default instance?

World was already the biggest by far when I first started lurking back in July, and it’s just getting more dominant. Before, there was quite some diversity in the distribution of generic communities, but nowadays the vast majority of posts that reach the top are from over there....

themeatbridge,

Sure, but if I want to share a link with my kid’s 3rd grade teacher, it’s nice if it doesn’t say “shit” in the middle of it.

themeatbridge,

That just raises further questions!

themeatbridge,

Teachers don’t like memes? Mostly I send them greentext.

Also, I stand corrected. It’s a good thing that period is in the middle, or people might figure out that it means “shit.”

themeatbridge,

I know, I just like that line.

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