FriendOfDeSoto

joined 2 years ago

I think you're onto something here. It may have to do with containing RAM.

[–] FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 3 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Yes, I have. I have no issues with JPGs or PNGs but any other format is a gamble. If you have a recent post you can get to to check, maybe you can add what format that image was (or add the link to the post with the image if you're okay with that)?

By most accounts, 25 Dec as a day in the calendar is a historical accident. The boy was probably not born in winter. Calendar problems, ancient Roman holidays, and the proximity to the winter solstice made this a historical game of telephone until a pope just set it in stone (some orthodox churches don't agree but January is probably only marginally more correct for his birthday).

Traditionally, Christmas lasted so long it usurped solar new years. On the 8th day of Christmas my sweetheart gave to me ... a shitload of weird stuff. Mostly birds, for some reason.

Correct me if I'm wrong here but isn't in UK English "Christmas" still used to describe the whole year end period encompassing the year change. To me they are two close but still separate events with a bit of decorational overlap. So I understand your question why there aren't more New Years songs. But the answer may simply be: history and tradition. People tolerate Christmas tunes until the 31st and then they're all cheered out. And NY for most is just a reminder that it's back to work now.

I did not have the feeling that we're talking about fully formed adults here.

Somebody is going to jump into this. But I would keep my eyes open beyond just the Chinese market. Vietnam and Thailand are interesting places to watch. V because of the relative sweetheart deal with the trumpist of tariffs. And T because they already do a lot of SSD manufacturing. And China, more than any other country, will be at the mercy of a particular person's bowel movements on Pennsylvania Ave.

[–] FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 22 points 2 days ago (4 children)

I don't think those particular comments, in writing and devoid of tone, not meant for public distribution (and she's probably not running for political office or something justifying higher scrutiny), necessarily qualify as ableist per se, more skirting the line. I've said very dumb things in my youth and context is important, even in chat threads. But the rest of the picture you painted of that person is: asshole. So for my money it doesn't really matter if she ticked that particular box as well. Stay away.

You could argue my take is too accepting of the current situation and I would agree with that. At the same time, I would argue yours is simplifying things quite a bit. Subscription TV channels came after free-to-air channels with commercials. This may depend on where you live in the world but most places have at least one local station or a selection of them broadcast through the air, not cable or satellite, and not subscription based. Financed through commercials or in some countries also through a license model (like in the UK). Cable/satellite/subscription channels are iterations on the model brought to you by capitalism. Ads in public transport can lower ticket prices. Billboards can help lower rental rates in buildings and their revenue adds to the tax intake of the community they're in. If you think it already takes too long to get potholes fixed, it would take even longer without them. Not all roads are toll roads. I get it: you don't like billboards. You're going to get all these unintended side effects if they were banned tomorrow.

Online ads are insufferable. I'm running 3-4 plugins to avoid them. I'm also normally watching broadcast TV on DVR so I can skip through the commercial breaks. I bail on any subscription service that adds ads.

The problem online is the cause of the problem. It's the simplicity with which data can be collected and the lack of regulation. It's also generally still paying off a debt incurred when in the early days of www users got accustomed to getting everything 'for free.' Traditional media has lowered the price dramatically of its own offerings to get new eyeballs online while older streams of income still paid for most expenses, like the income from TV commercial revenue or sales of printed paper. And as these traditional sources of great rivers of money decreased over decades, the ones that replaced it were digital trickles in danger of drying out. That brought about a "militarization" of online ads, ever more targeted and annoying. This problem needs a multi-pronged approach including regulation of data collection and new financing models for media in general.

[–] FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website -1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

Chose your own dystopia. Where no ads exist and everything is pay per view/read/report/etc. Or the one we're in.

The bigger problem with traffic deaths is that we developed a system of transportation that relies heavily on cars that are mostly driven by humans. Removing billboards is not going to improve on that that much. But underwear model billboard pileups are a thing. But so are those caused by drivers on their phones and my guess there are way more of those.

Tracking and selling of information has gotten out of hand, no doubt. It is political decisions or a lack thereof that got us here.

Btw everybody thinks they're immune to advertising. And we're not.

The unofficial wisdom of marketing is that half of any advertising budget is wasted. They just don't know which half. So they continue. This whole thing boils down to the fiduciary responsibilities to provide as much value to shareholders again, the bane of capitalism. They cannot afford to check which half is wasted.

And just for some context here: personally I don't mind billboard ads to be honest.

[–] FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 54 points 3 days ago (5 children)

I think the abundance of tools available to block ads online hints at a movement in itself. We don't need a leader or a central committee.

The wrinkle I see here is that a generalized 'everybody' hates ads but 'everybody' is also aware of the fact that they finance a large swath of stuff that we would have to pay for otherwise.

Of course not. If we blamed the language for the bad actions of the people who spoke it during, there would be virtually no language left in a pristine enough condition to learn.

That being said, tempers can boil over. So maybe don't shout your Duolingo answers at a full Starbucks. I mean, that's good advice regardless of the language but you know what I mean.

[–] FriendOfDeSoto@startrek.website 5 points 4 days ago (3 children)

None of those ch's are guttural and you skipped an h;)

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