Avatar_of_Self

joined 3 months ago
[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I think the issue is that you look like you are talking about health insurance in the US. There is basically a zero percent change the person you are responding to is talking about insurance from any plan in the US.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Step 1: License the technology for very cheap or free to competitors.

Step 2: Include features but its free because ads. Pay small monthly fee for ad-free.

Step 3: Revise CANNBus or replace it with new system. Make it a 'standard' so that aftermarket units can provide features but will also serve ads from the original car manufacturer and its DRM. Anyone reverse engineering the system gets sued into the ground for DMCA/Copyright laws because now they are bypassing DRM.

Step 4: Everyone gets ads regardless. Also, you must pay subscription fee to basically use the car. Ads are to "keep costs down" for features and/or car purchasing price.

Step 5: After everyone is mad, give slightly higher cost for subscription for ad-free.

People that complain are told 'It's just one coffee a month. No big deal."

Step 6: Offer a 5-year (non-transferrable or refundable) plan that you can just roll into the price of the car loan and 'locks in the price' and 'You don't have to worry about it anymore." Maybe toss in lame very small discounts for certain branded charging stations while on the plan. People already sign up for credit cards, give away their personal info. and become loyal customers to gas stations to save single digit percentages off on fuel.

People that buy new every 5 years usually buy the package.

People that try to save money and buy used cars pay the subscriptions.

Step 7: Double monthly price for ad-free tier and market it to "we had to raise prices for those that want a premium experience but kept the ad-based subscription fee cheap. We had to pass the cost somewhere." This will increase the demand for those 5-year plans.

Overall new car purchase demand increases a bit because of those plans.

Over the course of 15 or 20 years there will be an entire generation of drivers used to ads always being in cars and will just accept subscriptions and ads are just the way it's always been that way and that it must be that way.

For the EU, it'll probably be different where the car can perform basic functions without ads but 'premium features' for stuff like traction control, auto lane following, etc. will probably still be behind the system I'd imagine.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 0 points 5 days ago

They can spend as much time as they want with the patient. The insurance simply caps how much is billable.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 3 points 5 days ago

It's not different really. Either it is obvious and you don't need them or its your hardware vendor's fault (according to them). Still better than Oracle's software support, which is not a high bar.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 5 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

/usr used to be the user home directory on Unix...well most of them. I think Solaris/SunOS has always been /export/home as I recall.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

Yeah good point. I'm definitely guilty of looking at it through an NA centric lens on my post. Thanks for the perspective.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 23 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (10 children)

I doubt this happened because of busses that'd leave or parents wondering where the hell their kids are while they are waiting.

I doubt a private school would put up with a consistent disruptive student or with a teacher losing control of a class so bad that they keep everyone behind while also having to deal with angry paying parents.

It's possible but I doubt it'd happen more than once with that teacher.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 0 points 1 week ago

If we're doing Wikipedia as the sole citation then:

In 1806, Webster published his first dictionary, A Compendious Dictionary of the English Language. By 1807, he began work on a more extensive dictionary, An American Dictionary of the English Language, which took twenty-six years to complete. To evaluate the etymology of words, Webster learned twenty-eight languages, including Old English, Gothic, German, Greek, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, Dutch, Welsh, Russian, Hebrew, Aramaic, Persian, Arabic, and Sanskrit. His goal was to standardize American English, which varied widely across the country. They also spelled, pronounced, and used English words differently.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah_Webster#Blue-backed_speller

As time went on, Webster changed the spellings in the book to more phonetic ones. Most of them already existed as alternative spellings.[34] He chose spellings such as defense, color, and traveler, and changed the re to er in words such as center. He also changed tongue to the older spelling tung, but this did not catch on.

Furthermore your quote doesn't actually have a relevant citation:

He was very influential in popularizing certain spellings in the United States, but he did not originate them. Rather […] he chose already existing options such as center, color and check for the simplicity, analogy or etymology”

Though in context of the previous paragraph seems to imply that this was an opinion that the wikipedia article came to simply because there was a previous work that argued specifically for 'or' in place of 'our' but again, it appears to simply be their opinion based on an assumption.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

It depends on the genre of course because of the mechanics in play. Sure, FPS with bots are hard but a lot of genres are as challenging because the mechanics usually surround mostly running and gunning with bots (if you're playing with bots). Making the 'AI better' is going to be extremely difficult, especially when balancing resources out for your minimum requirements.

But for say an 3D action game, enemy ambushes, tougher environmental challenges, harder puzzles, more platforming, increase gear rarity for 'normal' gear and stuff can add a real challenge. Bullet sponges seems like the path of least resistance to development time. Especially if the 3D action game is single player.

Counter-strike specifically is a tough one because what other mechanics can be involved in it? In the original CS:S there were actual environmental concerns like you could shoot off boards on the rope bridge denying that path. When it released, the rope bridge was static and was always there. I'd imagine this was due to resources on the physics vs. 31 other players having to have a reasonable sync with the server and their updates.

Battlefield has done this over the years but instead of making it really dynamic it has been fairly static, even if it changes the map, it always does it the same way. Blow up a building in BF:BC2? The walls will always fall the same way and the destruction will always be the same, so it's like a state on or off update for that location for everyone. BF3 which was newer seemed to have even fewer instances where this could happen as just an example but they also doubled the player count. There have been other games that have done more dynamic updates but every engine, fidelity, language, updates/ticks expectations are all different.

Not every genre or game has to be focused on just your targets. The more mechanics that are offered or can be offered are going to be different but certainly, it seems like many games still do not take advantage of that even though they could.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I had brought in a disk from another old PC of mine that was an NTFS formatted drive but no Windows on it. It worked OK for games. It seemed to work a lot better than what people complained about. I wonder if it was because there was no boot partition or any oddness with how NTFS works with hibernation on system partitions.

Permissions weren't an issue because I just mounted the NTFS partitions with the user option.

I did eventually copy it over to a btrfs partition though for dedupe and snapshots like everything else.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

You need SPF, DKIM, DMARC with a RUA set up to an email that doesn't bounce. That's pretty much it. I've been running email servers a long time and actually set up email from a new domain/IP a couple of years ago as well.

[–] Avatar_of_Self@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

This is true. If you have DMARC and your RUA set up (with a working email (or one that doesn't bounce at least)) along with SPF and DKIM, Google and MS will accept your mail. The only time it won't at that point is if your IP is in the same /24 as a known spammer but so long as the spam stops, you'll fall off the list. Some of the common spamlists allow you to request your IP be removed by request and I can only recall one list that almost nobody uses that makes you pay for the removal though there may be more I don't recall.

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