Late reply but I am really good with spice in the first stage, eating it. Then if it's really spicy, I'll have a few days of bad stomach ache and shits that actually feel like they're burning.
Khrux
That's the real thing I wasn't ready to admit until you said it. I don't want a screwdriver because it's less impressive to see. People will look at me and make the mistake of thinking they couldn't do it, but when it felt like LEGO, people were more likely to be interested.
I'd really really like a phone with cameras that are flush with the back of the case, and don't care whatsoever how thin my phone is once it's under 1cm.
It feels like the entire ethos of smartphone design (led by apple) had sleek minimal design as it's guiding light, but keeps adding exceptions. As much as I enjoy a versatile, bulky laptop and photography camera, I really enjoy the style of a smartphone being a piece of glass in my pocket.
I'd have preferred a click lock of sorts, because in the cases I'm wanting to swap my battery, I'm probably on the move with no access to power / charging, such as hiking, coach rides, camping etc.
Currently I'm pretty happy with a portable charger but I'd much rather have one or two fully charged batteries, both for the speed of getting back to full charge and reducing the speed of battery degradation.
I'm already a big fan of having a minimalist daily carry, I have my phones with my bank cards on it, my house keys and maybe my camera or water bottle, and that's all. If be happy to shove a few spare batteries in a little case when I know I'll be out the house for some time, but a screwdriver is something I'd prefer to not have to carry every day.
I 90% agree, I swapped to wireless earbuds about a decade ago when my aux port on whatever phone I had then broke, and I immediately preferred it. I went from buying £10 wired earphones from a supermarket what sounded shit and broke every month to £25 wireless earphones that sounded shit and broke every 6 months, so for me it was am improvement. I was also a chronic "catch headphone cable on every handle" victim, to the point that I immediately preferred the wireless solution. Another thing is when my wireless headphones break, they fucking break; I go with one earbud for about a month then inevitably buy a new pair. When my wired headphones started to degrade, I always fought it, ending up in a losing battle of finding that perfect way to hold them to make them still work. The only downside I have nowadays is when I'm listening to music or a video and realise I've misplaced my phone, which isn't really an issue, just that it was impossible when it was tethered to my ears.
But I'm probably part of a very small minority when it comes to my preference. I carry a compact camera any day I leave the house intending to take photos, so my ideal phone would have one rear camera that prioritises efficiency over quality. I'd have no headphone port, and to be honest, I could live with no ports and wireless charging and data transfer. I've had two smartphones in the last that had their USB-C ports fail as chargers (both galaxy S8s), and I could go years without needing to use the port for anything else. My dream phone would have no ports, one rear camera without a bump, no front camera, minimal tactile side buttons, be pretty slim, have a swappable battery and run a FOSS OS and mostly FOSS apps.
I respect the voices that want a smartphone equivalent to a ThinkPad a lot, but I don't really think it's anywhere near as necessary as a ThinkPad would be, because for most tasks that need something like that, I'd just use that.
That being said, there's two reasons I don't 100% agree. The first is to do with the fairphone specifically. More battery space and better waterproofing don't really apply to a phone where I can swap the battery and it comes apart so much that it's not really competitively waterproof. The second is larger, which is that I can just not use a headphone jack if I prefer wireless, while people who prefer wired are having increasingly few options available on the market.
I'm actually quite fond of a large screen, but it's not enough of a selling point for me to not go for this as my next phone. I have large enough hands that I don't struggle with reach on a large phone, so the main drawback is the additional battery power. But the fairphone has a swappable battery anyway, so that issue is more or less nullified.
My pet peeve is the front camera, I cannot wrap my head around the lunacy of having a large dead spot on the front of the phone, to the point I'd rather have a phone with no front facing camera than a big dead spot. People throw out screens for less.
Fairphone is almost the ideal phone for me, except this, and although I can probably remove the camera module, I can't swap the screen for one without the dead patch.
I doubt any major power will intervene for Iran unless it looks like a regime change that actually benefits Israel / the USA happens. China and Russia have basically been minimal allies with Iran for the sake of funding an enemy of America, but they've always wanted Iran to remain weaker.
The small pro Iran groups, largely the groups Iran trained will act, but they have been already for the past 3 years.
Book your time travellers grand tour feast of flood beer, butter, cheese, whiskey, wine and chocolate.
For the cheaper package, there's the toxic runoff, coal and radioactive material tour.
50% of the list is "The great chocolate and beer flood, where everyone got drunk and full." And the other half is "The terrible toxic fossils fuel slip or ecological disaster and death", except both have equal deaths.
In the countryside, we fucken too
I agree, knowing other people have sex is absolutely fine, in fact I assume it as default for basically any adult in a relationship. Not using protection may be unwise in almost all cases, but trying for a baby with a partner is the main exception, and it's never been gross.
I understand that a lot of people have been raised with shame, and I feel a certain pity for them, but I'm not a fan of treating this shame as righteous.
Microsoft has absolutely been preparing for the end of traditional consoles more or less since the flop of the Xbox One. Their entire push a few years back to make "Everything Xbox" was a bit mistimed and disloyal to their console war cultists but they're right that it's the natural end point.
I think we'll probably see streaming games from their servers reoccur in popularity pretty soon, as much as I'm not a fan of it, because it's the total end point for non tech savvy consumers, they just pay a subscription, get a controller which can connect to the TV or phone and download an app, no hardware required. Meanwhile every consumer who is resisting the death of tech literacy (everyone else), is going in this direction. The physical console will reduce in popularity year by year as it fills a niche that nobody needs anymore.
That being said, the popularity of the switch and steam deck interests me, because it's a third direction away from traditional consoles that I'd not have predicted.