Saucepain

joined 1 week ago
[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 6 points 3 hours ago (2 children)

You should read Semiosis, a sci-fi book about a planet with a lot of bamboo.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago

C'mon Matrim - EXPLODE!

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago

Great post. The personal touch reminded me of the articles on Rock Paper Shotgun.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 43 points 3 days ago

Since the site keeps getting the hug of death, here's a transcript.

We are joining a lawsuit will challenge the President’s unchecked authority to impose tariffs. We will not stand idly by while our livelihoods–and the livelihoods of thousands of small business owners and contractors in the US, along with the customers whose pursuit of happiness we hold dear–are treated like pawns in a political game. Like many tabletop publishers (import code 9504.90.6000*), we started print runs of products before the President took office, and now we face an unprecedented $14.50 tariff tax for every $10 we spent on manufacturing with our trusted long-term partner in China. For Stonemaier Games alone (a US based company in which all 8 employees are US citizens), that amounts to upcoming tariff payments of nearly $1.5 million. If the tariffs are damaging your business as well, please contact me at jamey@stonemaier.com and I will connect you with the law firm. There is no cost to join the lawsuit. I try to lead with compassion and empathy, so legal action is very low on my list of ways to handle difficult situations. But with this new norm of a 145% tariff imposed by the President on all exports from China to the US–including products that have been in the manufacturing process for months–we are compelled to take action. Of course, this isn’t the only action we’re taking, as we have 200,000 units of reprints and 50,000 units of Vantage (plus 57,000 other Vantage accessories) ready to ship out of Shenzhen in a few weeks. Here’s what else we’re doing in regards to these fully manufactured products: We’re selling to other countries: Around 35% of our annual sales are to distributors, retailers, and consumers outside of the US. We ship directly from China to those distributors and fulfillment centers, so the tariffs will not impact our prices in those regions. We’re storing the US quantities in China: For now, we will pay for warehousing in China store most of the US-bound products in the hopes that the tariffs will decrease by the time we need that inventory to replenish our supply in the US. We’re sending out-of-stock US quantities to the US: Finspan is out of stock in the US, so we are proceeding to send the restock as scheduled. We will eat most of the tariff cost (which more than doubles our costs) to minimize the impact on distributors, retailers, and consumers. We’re sending direct-sale Vantage to the US: I’ve spent too long trying to make this game affordable that I’m not going to let one person with unchecked power get in the way of me serving my customers. The tariffs may have a slight impact on the US price, but the plan is to largely keep our direct price the same and give customers the option to cover the tariff cost at checkout. The plan to release Vantage to US distribution and retail may need a delay–the lack of margins there have a bigger impact on a new game than on reprints. Again, these strategies are focused on products we have already manufactured, as the tariffs did not carve out a grace period for such products. We are fortunate to have a buffer at Stonemaier Games to weather this storm, and my heart goes out to the many other small businesses–in the US and beyond–who invested their resources in products that they can no longer afford to bring into the US. *There is an article circulating that states incorrectly that tariffs on tabletop games are only 20%. The (unfortunately) correct number is 145%.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

Yes! Such a small throwaway line for something that really makes automations way better. I had a Choose block based Notify automation which now has a single Notify action at the end with just the variables being declared in the Choose options instead of having the Notify action specified in each option.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 4 days ago

The concept of sustainable mining strikes me as inherently contradictory.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I like the windows fizzing into existence, how did you accomplish that? Also, what's the rainmeter-esque "Guess what" background component?

 

Mr Daley said the Freemasons regularly take bookings from media organisations for the use of their premises, but "always insist on knowing before it takes place, who the interviewer and interviewee are, and what the content is to make sure that it sits with our organisation’s morals and principles". However, in this case, he said they only received that information "at the last moment", about an hour before the interview was conducted. "When it came to my attention, I then debated with some of my colleagues. Would we cancel it or would we let it go ahead? And we decided in our wisdom that we just let it go," Mr Daley said. Asked why he decided to allow the interview to proceed, he said it was because they got an assurance from the media company that all of the backgrounds would be blurred and that there would be no reference to the Freemasons' Hall.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 6 points 5 days ago (1 children)

I don't understand what the image is trying to convey anyway (though agree with the premise of Amazon-fucking).

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I think those are lips.

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

NacMacFeegle wahey!

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

FreeCad is getting much more capable, have you tried it?

[–] Saucepain@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Outside of Steam, how have you found gaming compatibility? I know Xbox Gamepass doesn't work as that's very specifically a Windows app, but how about other standalone games/platforms?

 

Text summary of the State of the Open Home stream.

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