g0nz0li0

joined 1 year ago
[–] g0nz0li0 46 points 1 month ago (1 children)

He's so obviously not prepared to deal with anyone but sycophants.

[–] g0nz0li0 2 points 1 month ago

This is why we got Stadia. Imagine Netflix where you pay a monthly fee and still have to buy all the movies and shows at full price. That was Stadia's model.

Thos erodes the concept of ownership so that it is substituted for rental, without stating that clearly. Stadia failed but in doing so it probably helped Microsoft figure out how to eventually get away with doing the exact same thing.

Games should clearly say if you're basically renting them, not have it buried in the EULA. Let publishers full price and let consumers decide if they are prepared to live with it.

[–] g0nz0li0 6 points 1 month ago

Totally agree. You always leave yourself room to negotiate down.

Imagine not supporting this because you think it's unfair to the industry, given the very specific examples that have been given.

[–] g0nz0li0 22 points 1 month ago

He talks about that. I think the gist is that a lot of games that are online services could run locally, the publisher just chooses not to. That's why Ross chose the Crew 2 as his hill to die on: there's evidence that an offline does/did exist and just wasn't enabled. That's a practice that needs to be challenged.

The argument goes that a game that relies on server side technology to run in any form shouldn't be sold as a product that you can own. This needs to be reflected in the price and licensing model. That seems fair.

The big question is why TF we're at a point where a company should be allowed to sell you a product and say you own it then remove your right to use the product arbitrarily. I bet there's IP in the server side code, but having a system where a corporation's IP and ability to make money from the IP is more important that the concept of ownership is deeply fucked up.

Technology Tangents did a video where a game he bought on CD and tried to play on period-correct hardware won't run because there was DRM that called a server to check the date and to make sure it wasn't leaked early. Decades after the release, the server is gone and the game can't run, ironically, because it's so far outside of its release date. That's the kind of bullshit that absolutely shouldn't be tolerated.

[–] g0nz0li0 6 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

That article is from Jan 2023 when Sony responded to a Bloomberg report that they had cut production due to lower than expected launch sales.

It's possible they will rebut this article too, but they haven't so far AFAIK.

[–] g0nz0li0 3 points 3 months ago

I agree with you, and I don't usually pay any attention to individual poll results. But this sentiment writ large may have an impact on the general election since voters typically link the performance of the economy to the current president (fairly or unfairly).

Interesting graph on this article showing correlation between consumer confidence and positive approval in the president:

https://theconversation.com/bidens-not-yet-getting-a-poll-bump-for-the-improving-economy-history-tells-us-why-220515

Think of those stupid "i did that" stickers, but in reverse.

[–] g0nz0li0 1 points 3 months ago

Technically "next Sunday" is the nearest Sunday (eg "sunday of next week"), however next Saturday is not (because it's the Saturday of next week"). This assumes we all accept that Sunday is considered the start of the week - which isn't always the case nowadays.

It's chaos! But I'm just pointing out that there's a wired logic to it, which I assume at some point made more sense than it does in our time.

[–] g0nz0li0 3 points 3 months ago

I think we can all agree it's confusing. I am just pointing out that there is an internal consistency in why it's phrased in this way.

[–] g0nz0li0 27 points 3 months ago (4 children)

Saturday the 4th is part of "this week" so it's "this Saturday".

Saturday the 11th is part of "next week" so it's "next Saturday".

Otherwise "next Saturday" and "Saturday next week" would mean different things.

[–] g0nz0li0 3 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

And legislate content ownership altogether. The idea that Reddit spent more than a decade growing its community just so that it could use our content as its own property is a huge issue. How do we safely and fairly communicate and express our ideas in society where the platforms that enable this automatically claim ownership of our ideas? Social media are middlemen with outsized influence.

[–] g0nz0li0 19 points 5 months ago

*free speech if Elon agrees with you

[–] g0nz0li0 83 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (3 children)

It's such bullshit, Reddit could have been so much more. Researching my latest purchase/obsession, and the only way to find anything that isn't corporate sponsored reviews or AI content farming is to add the word "Reddit" to the end of the search.

As someone with an 11 year old account that I deleted during the TPA debacle, I fully recognise that there's a huge problem here. Reddit created a place where people wanted to put their thoughts, ideas, and opinions, and now that they are cashing out TOO FUCKING BAD LAME EBD USER.

Edit: /oblig fuck you spez. Slimy little arsehole sold everyone out and thinks he deserves to be rich because his shitty site isn't absolutely irredeemable.

 

The ROG Ally has been received pretty well, but many reviews focus on the caveats or comparisons to SteamDeck, whereas this is a nice step back and celebration of what the ROG Ally does well.

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