paultimate14

joined 1 year ago
[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 24 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Bruh admitting your wisdom is outdated isn't the flex you think it is.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 58 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Productivity has risen as well. Anon likely has a mind-nunbing job that produces more economically in a year than a village or two of those ancestors would have.

Keynes famously predicted in 1930 that his grandchildren would only need a 15 hour workweek as technology would allow people to work less. Many others predicted similar throughout the 1900's. When you look at a household perspective, Keynes was writing in a time when huge populations of women were expected not to work already.

What we see now is that it is incredibly rare for multi-adult households to have singular incomes. For the household, the 40 hour workweek might have actually grown to 80. Or more, as individuals engage in gig work or get 2nd or 3rd jobs. Plus forced overtime is becoming an issue, and of course wage theft.

Wages have stagnated while productivity has increased. Pensions (and unions) are gone (at least in the US). Inequality is constantly increasing - the rich use their power to get richer while the poor are stuck getting poorer.

Anon mentions his freedoms, but neglects to mention he probably spends 50 or more hours a week either working, on break from work, getting ready, commuting. He cannot criticize his employer publicly. An arrest and a night or two in jail could throw him into poverty. Unless, of course, he is rich enough that he doesn't need to work, in which case simply tossing his name around with he police can often get him out of any trouble.

He mentions healthcare - US life expectancy not, and I do not believe has ever been, 90 years. Maybe for ultra-wealtjy women? Currently the average is 76 years for the whole country. But even then, women live longer than men, and the top-1% of income earners live almost 15 years longer than the bottom-1%. . So if anon is a low-income male, his life expectancy may be in his mid-60's. Which is comparable to the average life expectancy of the late 1700's- early 1900's in Europe.

He has a lot of fancy toys at his disposal, but his life is still being consumed by the wealthy in power.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

True, but I'm not sure how closely Xbox works with the rest of Microsoft. As far as I know you have never been able to put Windows on an Xbox or Xbox System Software on a PC officially. In contrast, the PS2 and PS3 had official Linux support (which Sony tried to remove from. The PS3 for security concerns and got sued for).

Microsoft has a hardware division yes, but barely. It's basically just Xbox, which is failing, and the Surface, which is also failing. They already lost the Mobile market. They seem content to have their laptop and desktop focus just be getting Microsoft software on other hardware.

I kind of get the impression that's the direction they are moving. They simply haven't done well in hardware, and their more successful business areas are the ones that are putting Microsoft software onto 3rd party hardware.

I'm still not convinced GamePass is really going to work, but Xbox and Microsoft seem to be. And while I don't like subscriptions in general, GamePass definitely surpasses any competitor. So rather than roll out new hardware, I think they are moving towards putting GamePass on the Switch 2 and PS5 or PS6. Microsoft has instructions published for getting Xbox Cloud Gaming working on the Deck. I think they want that on the handhelds from AYA, AYN, Asus, Logitech, GPD, and everything else.

They might want to make Windows a viable option for those handhelds, but... They also might not. That would be a huge amount of work for them to compete with Steam. And we've seen how unpopular Windows 11 has been. They've been downsizing the teams working on Windows for years and focusing more on Edge and AI. I get the impression they just want the Xbox division to lower costs and become profitable at this point.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

50 tabs? She dodged a bullet.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

Even as late as the 2016 RNC debate. He was speaking coherently, responding to opponents, making logical points. He was still lying and promising to do terrible things, but he seemed in control of himself and I could see how some conservatives might call him charismatic even.

Nowadays he just kind of picks a vibe and spews out words vaguely related, and the audience projects what they want him to mean onto it.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I have some questions there.

  1. hHs that even ever been so much as rumored? There were leaks from various suppliers hinting at the Deck and Switch long before they were in develop. It's possible I missed something, or possible they just haven't leaked anything, but so far I don't have a reason to think they would be trying to enter that space.

  2. Microsoft seems to be abandoning that space. The Windows phone died ages ago, and the Surface seems to be languishing.

  3. Operating System. Would it be windows? There are already plenty of handhelds that run windows, and usually the biggest problem people have with them is that windows sucks for that application and they replace the OS. Would they have a custom OS like the Xbox? What would it bring to the table that Steam LS doesn't? Valve already put in a ton of work to get Steam OS as good as it is- would Xbox/Microsoft do that too? If it just uses Steam OS, what does the hardware bring that differentiates it from the Deck?

  4. Software. I don't know what the unit cost of a Deck is, but I'm guessing it's pretty close to the sales price. The Deck does not need to be a profit center for Valve as long as it drives software sales on Steam. The Microsoft store has already failed- would an Xbox store on such a device manage to be profitable? Would it be locked down and incompatible with Steam? Maybe they could partner with Epic to compete? I'm just having a hard time seeing Xbox/Microsoft enter that business model.

What might be more likely is something like the Portal or G-Cloud. An ARM-based, lightweight product designed to be used for cloud gaming with GamePass. Maaaaaybe some local streaming from your PC or Xbox too. Even with that they would be competing against other products and pretty much every smartphone and tablet. There might be room to move some units, but similar to Sony I don't see that being huge.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

This looks like an ad for Pyre by SuperGiant Games if it came out in the early 2000's.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 15 points 1 month ago

Were there other uses? Yes.

Were they common? Well, just look at the GameBoy pocket. At the time it was designed (it released 7 years after the original GameBoy) there were a lot of people at Nintendo who wanted to get rid of the port entirely because it was barely ever used. They ended up compromising by using a different, smaller, cheaper port that needed an adapter to work with the regular ones.

Which was kind of a pain for some people because the GB Pocket and Pokemon both came out in Japan in 1996 lol.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 13 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Weird to use a picture of a child predator in an unrelated meme

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 3 points 1 month ago

Is that the Smilodon?

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I meant in terms of establishing good diplomatic relations between the US and Russia. From the fall of the Berlin wall up until the Obama administration it looked like relations were steadily improving as Russia was becoming more capitalist. Also at least from the US perspective it's probably the most famous case of exposing a hostile foreign diplomat to American values.

I remember reading articles about how Russia was giving away land and paying people to come populate their rural eastern provinces. I'm not sure exactly when the sentiment changed- Putin clearly didn't like Obama, but at this moment I can't remember any specific incidents pior to the Crimea invasion. Before that, I remember them being seen as an economically inferior, but developing, potential ally. Similar to Japan before it's "miracle", lumped into BRIC with Brazil, India, and China as a potential new place to do business.

As for Yeltsin being bad for Russians? Eh, probably. I'm content leaving discussion to those whose special interest is recent Russian history.

[–] paultimate14@lemmy.world 4 points 1 month ago

As a black person she'll alienate the racists in the DNC. There aren't as many as the DNC, but it would be naive to think there aren't any. As much as I don't want to cater to racists, beating Trump is more important right now.

As a woman she will alienate misogynists. Same thing.

As a cop she's going to alienate a ton of voters. She's recently changed her positions on a lot of crime-related issues like marijuana, but idk how much that's going to help her win the BLM crowd.

I'll vote for her if she's the pick, no question. Heck, there are very few people the DNC could nominate at this point that I wouldn't vote for. I suppose as Biden's VP she was kind of nominated in the primary if you squint. But yeah... DNC elites appointing a cop at the last minute doesn't strike me as the best way to fight fascism.

Identity politics aside, I like a lot of what she claims to support, but that's assuming that she's truly no longer the prosecutor she used to be. She has good records on reproductive rights, economics, LGBTQ+ support. My biggest gripe with her would be she's still just as pro-Israel as Biden and most of the DNC seems to be.

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