bisby

joined 2 years ago
[–] bisby@lemmy.world 13 points 5 days ago

To help you better understand, the way I see it, every time I do something that financially benefits , I assume I am giving money to the executives/owners/etc.

For example, if I spend $30 on a Harry Potter book, I assume JK Rowling gets $0.10 of that (i dont know how it works, but lets assume), and she spends a substantial portion of her income on anti-trans rights. If we assume anywhere near 10%, then me giving her 10 cents is the same as donating 1 cent to anti-trans rights. Is Harry Potter a good enough book that I am willing to donate money to hate groups to obtain it? Personally no. Other people may look at it and say "It's only $0.01, and I really like the story!" and think it is worth it. That's up to you where your threshold is for when the good outweighs the bad.

Contributing legitimacy to something can financially benefit it. Even if I never spend any money on Firefox (for example), user metrics allow them to make bargains with Google to get more money in exchange for default search status. So me using Firefox gets money for Mozilla. And if Mozilla was spending that money on hate groups, I wouldn't want to be involved in that.

Yes, I am aware that basically every company out there is super shitty. And giving money or support to almost any major corporation is basically funding hate groups in some way. But when the CEO is loudly outspoken about these things, I'd very much rather just swap to a brand that at least isn't outwardly proud of it's stupidity. Unless the other options are just as bad and I need a thing: if my local ISP was run by murderers, I still need internet. That's not something I'm willing to compromise on. But I do have other choices in browsers and Brave doesn't have any features I can't live without.

So to answer your question: it does not reflect on the product quality, but it does impact how much quality I demand from a product.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 15 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Brave might be a fine browser, but the CEO is infamously anti-LGBTQ and was anti-mask during the pandemic. And the whole crypto-coin association and injecting affiliate links into search results... Everything about Brave makes me want to avoid Brave. Is there anything magical about it that make it any different than other chromium browsers that makes it worth supporting right wing crypto bros?

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 11 points 6 days ago

Tarkov is a live service game. Which has its own ups and downs. Tarkov has benefits of having some things progress while you are offline. Things happen at the server level while you're gone.

Not every game needs to be a live service game though or try to use live service features in a single player offline game.

Unless there is a very specific reason in the game mechanics why in game time is 1:1 with real time, it doesn't make a lot of sense except to be divisive and a discussion point.

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

It's far more complicated than I have made it sound. it's not just "once every year apple go up". You'd need to be following as much public information about a company as possible, and be keeping track of trends. Keeping track of those things is a full time job. Especially since you need to keep track of many companies. And then that will still often only get you a slight edge.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 0 points 1 week ago (3 children)

In theory, if you are following a company's public financials very closely and keeping track of things, not all of the stock market is completely unpredictable.

Some companies do certain things on predictable cadences. Every year at WWDC, apple announces a new iphone, and every year the stock price goes up a bit as a result. You're not going to triple your money in a week, but if you can get 5% in a week, you're already doing as good as most banks offer for a whole year.

Knowing too much information is illegal. That's "insider trading", at which point it is completely not gambling because you already know if the stock is going to go up or down, and that's just cheating.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (6 children)

I know you didn't ask but an opportunity to info dump is always fun.

Shorting is basically borrowing stock from someone, selling it. and then buying it back later before the person wants their stock back. Since (mostly) all shares are equal, as long as I return to the same stock, there's no reason to hold onto a specific share.

If a stock is going down, if I borrow a share for a week, sell it for $100, then in 6 days buy it for $50 and return it to you, then I've just made $50.

It's a way to make money when the stock market is going down, but is often riskier because with buying stock, you can just hold indefinitely. If I buy a $100 share, and the price goes to $0. I just lost $100. The most I can possibly lose is $100. (edit: and I sell at any point in the future when I decide. Could be 1 week, could be 30 years.)

But when shorting, you have to return the shares to the actual owner at some point, and since you sold the shares, you MUST get them back. But if I sold your $100 share, and in 6 days it is now $10,000 (this wouldn't happen, but for example), and I don't have $10,000, now I can't return your share to you, and I'm in REAL big trouble. The amount of money I can lose is technically infinite, and since I don't have infinite money to lose, it probably just devolves into legal issues.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 70 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Nano... Like... The one that has all the keybinds permanently shown at the bottom of the screen?

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 7 points 1 week ago

The java edition supports VR mods. So it "Supports VR" in the sense of "this is where VR works"

The bedrock edition supports nothing and is capable of nothing.

It's a semantics game, but if you want Minecraft in VR, you have to use java edition.

Most good things in Minecraft are modded and java is infinitely better than bedrock as a result. Differentiating between base support and modded features in java is contrary to the whole point of java edition

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

This lightning talk requires running SteamVR for the room setup bits, and it recommends a few things in the name of "user friendliness" that I would otherwise not suggest (Ubuntu bad, Gnome bad, etc). (edit: so switching to Monado wouldn't really help since it would require SteamVR working in the first place, and if SteamVR works... OP could just use SteamVR)

But it does show a lot of problems and solutions and things to try along the way.

Based on https://db.vronlinux.org/ (which is like protondb for VR, kinda), monado works better for VRChat, but otherwise SteamVR should honestly work just fine.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Is your issue getting it to start at all, or performance issues?

For me it wouldnt start at all in the default big picture mode and would only start in desktop mode.

I made a few tweaks to get performance tuned up when I was on the Vega64, but I don't remember what all I did there.

edit: Also, I'm the KDE desktop (i wanted my HTPC/VRPC to be as steamdeck similar as possible, and also I have strong anti gnome feelings).

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 4 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

Yeah. Valve Index.

I originally got it working on a Ryzen 1700, and Vega64. But Vega64 is old GCN architecture and it performed poorly.

I have since upgraded the VR setup to Ryzen 5950x and Radeon 6900xt, and it works quite well. I just played an hour of Beat Saber actually.

[–] bisby@lemmy.world 17 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Yeah. Shrimp fedthechimney allafraidhoe. A classic pasta to go with rice.

 

A British person making a video about a Czech stadium, and not just using metric?! Not an American in sight, and yet...

 

Maybe this is just a me problem, and I can't find the settings. Or maybe these are things they changed in 115 and made it worse?

Collapsing threads. If I collapse everything thread, click to a different folder and then click back, every thread is expanded. I would vastly prefer "every thread is collapsed", or "we remember where things were". I never even noticed what it was on 102, but it wasn't "always expand everything"

Tab bar positioning. In 102 (and I could swear in some 115 screenshots Ive seen) the tab bar was at the very top. In 115, the tab bar is below the "Get Messages, Write, Address Book, etc" + search toolbar. The old way was so much better. It feels weird to have things ABOVE the tab bar change when i select a tab. thats the point of tabs, things are supposed to be contained "within" the tab.

Both of these are from their own documentation:

Old good:

New busted:

Are there settings for either of these changes, or is 115 just a downgrade for me and I should stick to 102?

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