The_Terrible_Humbaba

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

PS:

To OP,

Thank you for keeping this community alive and posting so much; I don't come here often and I'm generally more of a lurker than a commenter, but I really appreciate it.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago (2 children)

From the article:

Cook himself was fined $8,442.64 for his part in the ordeal.

Better than nothing, but I don't understand how the dude who threw the first hit is fined less than the one who is just firing back. It just encourages the idea that's it's better to be the instigator IMO.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

D

Don't give me hope.

I was really into D, but I gave up on it because it seemed kind of dead. It's often not mentioned in long lists of languages (i.e. I think Stack Overflow's report did not mention it), and I think I remember once looking at a list of projects that used D and most of them were dead. I think I also remember once seeing a list of companies that used D, and when I looked up one of them I found out it didn't exist anymore 😐️

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I don't think there's anything stopping modern games from having the same vibes, and being creative with graphics. I'd say one example of a modern game with high res graphics, realistic water, and even ray tracing, which still looks very unique and distinct is Paradise Killer. Another one that also looks quite modern in some ways while still being very distinct in its own way, is Heaven's Vault. It's a choice made by AAA studios because photorealistic visuals tend to attract more eyes and sell better, even if people get bored of the game quite quickly.

And the thing is, AC Unity - which came out in 2014 - still looks better than the majority of AAA games I see nowadays, and despite the large crowds which are a bit CPU demanding it still has much lower requirements than those games that look worse.


EDIT: And if you just want games that actually look retro and old school, there are some from indie devs doing that; examples include: Dread Delusion, The Case of the Golden Idol, Death Trash, Felvidek, Return of the Obra Dinn.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Ah, I see, I definitely agree with everything you're saying; I just got a bit confused. When you talked about "green option", I was thinking something like fast fashion vs clothes that will last, for example.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

I'm not completely sure of what point you're making. Would you buy the cheaper product even if you could afford the more expensive green one?

Because if the answer is "no", then you are still agreeing with OP; and if the answer is "yes" then you are saying you want to knowingly buy something that is harmful for the environment and encourage a company to make more of it, while deflecting responsibly and saying that corpos and govs are the ones who have to do something.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

Mate, it's about context, time, and place.

When the talk is about personal responsibility and some one comes in all mad that people aren't currently criticizing the government and corporations, implying it's not a "grown up conversation", then that shifting blame and trying to skirt responsibility. You don't have to convince me the government is bad because I already agree; it's the other people in this thread who are having a fit at OP and being condescending because of the mention of personal responsibility.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Alright, I'm only going to address your first paragraph because ... THAT'S LITERALLY WHAT IS BEING DONE. Like, wtf are you talking about?

Any time a post or comment says something about personal responsibility, in comes some one getting mad and complaining, trying to shift all the blame away, just like in the comment I replied to.

Meanwhile, the opposite never happens. I've never seen some who talks about personal responsibility who doesn't also agree that governments and corporations are responsible.

Me and OP were not the ones to go into posts criticizing the government and corporations, and get mad and act condescendinly while saying that that it's all about personal responsibility and you shouldn't blame corpos and govs. I talk plenty of shit about them, I bet so does OP; the difference is that we don't pretend like personal choices by everyday people doesn't play into it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

As for the first part of your comment, I'm not fully sure that I understand. From the context of the conversation, it sounds like you disagree with me and are saying your plan is "food shortages will happen and civilization will begin to collapse, and that is how things will change"; and I'm not saying that won't happen, but I am saying it would be morally reprehensible not to try and do something about it before it got to that point. If anything, the possibility of that happening is all the more reason to try and raise awareness to the problem before it gets that bad, so I'm not sure why you are disagreeing.

As for the rest, it sounds like you're overanalyzing both what is just a simple metaphor, and what is a two strip comic panel. To overanalyze and counter your own analysis, the rise of the water is usually caused by heavy rains, which is what the "water droplet" part of the metaphor is referring to; and the comic strip is meant to be an oversimplified and funny way of saying we should raise awareness to the problem and convince them to take action - whatever action you prefer; it's meant to be absurdist. It is not literally saying "you should tell your friends climate change exists". And if your preferred solution is forming a guerrilla, then that is what the comic is telling you to talk to your friends about. You can't form a guerrilla on your own; or, if you do, there's no one to protect you or keep the fight going when you get taken to prison/killed.

And if for some weird reason your friends haven't heard of climate change, then yes, that quite literally would be the start, unless you want your friends to think you're a loon and call the cops on you.

But even then… its three droplets against hundreds of thousands moving in the other direction. And all the individual droplets know that.

Exactly, and that's why you raise awareness by talking to people. If you get 3 friends and I get 3 friends, we now have 6 friends. And if each of those manages to get another 3 friends, then now we total 26 - that seems like a much better number to start a guerrilla with. And if you keep that chain going long enough, you'll get enough droplets to change the current.

Sometimes when I have discussions like this with someone, I feel like we are standing in the rain and we both agree with need some kind of roof to shelter us. And then when I say "we should build some kind of support structure, maybe get some tools and materials" the other person turns hostile ^(or^ ^politely^ ^disagrees,^ ^but^ ^90%^ ^of^ ^the^ ^time^ ^they^ ^turn^ ^hostile)^ and goes "No! What we need is to build a roof!". Like I'm not even necessarily disagreeing with whatever your proposed solution is - a roof, voting, boycotts, blowing up pipelines, forming a guerrilla - I'm just saying that to get the solution you need a solid foundation.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago

If I'm so close, then help me cross the gap. Just in your other comment you said you wished "we could have grown up discussions", and now that you have an opportunity to have one and educate people you instead chose to go with a childish condescending jab with no substance or value behind it. Almost like everything you say is just virtue signaling BS fluff so you can throw blame at other people and avoid having to make changes in your life.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Apart from the fact that "taking action" is still not a concrete plan and your comment is still void of any real substance, are you planning on taking whatever "action" alone? Are you going to be a one-man army? Because otherwise you need to raise awareness and bring people to your side.

By "action" do you mean voting? Are you going to do it alone?

By "action" do you mean blowing up a pipeline? Are you going to do it alone?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 month ago (8 children)

Who is electing your government? Who is feeding the corporations by buying their products? If you think your three friends not caring, and my three friends not caring, and OP's three friends not caring is all inconsequential and there's no point in changing their minds, then how do you envision change happening? That is a geniune question; do you actually have a plan of action, or is it just "the corporations and governments are the ones who have to do something"?

Like the saying goes, "no individual drop of rain sees themselves as responsible for the flood", or something along those lines.

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