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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)MI
Posts
1
Comments
124
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Here's the thing, if you reduce the amount of people who will vote, it increases the cost of a singe vote and by extension incentivises falsifications by the ruling party.

    Being able to vote isn't a privelege to cherish it, it's a right.

    When it comes to such things, always remember how they can be abused, because they likely will be.

    This is how informational autocracies do it. The deincentivise participation and use state employees to vote for people who didn't participate. This is how it works in Russia, Belarus, and many more other countries.

  • It's interesting how one entity is being described as both pro-fascist and pro-LGBT. What an oxymoron.

    Also, what an irony you call them hypocrites whilst being one yourself, because:

    1. Learn what fascism actually means
    2. Stop putting your hand in other people's pants
    3. Realise that step 2 is exactly what fascists are known for doing

    Maybe then you'll stop being one.

  • Be aware that 8Gb version of 3060 is practically a different card. Think of it as 3050Ti or smth.

    If you care only about games, you probably want to look at 6600xt (8Gb), 6700 (10Gb) and 6700xt (12Gb), as those offer better value than 3060, or any Nvidia card from those classes for that matter.

    Also Intel A750 and A770 are an option, although you'll have to tinker a lot more with those.

    Also, since you're budgeting your housing, you could also budget (as in save now, buy outright later) the GPU. It shouldn't be impacting your finances much if you do that.

  • There are a couple ways in which its useful to me.

    First is when I just want a windows-esque interface with lots of floating windows. Especially for Office apps, because they also start looking more like their Windows counterparts. Through tablet itself it may not see that much use, but when connected to an external monitor it's really nice.

    And second is when you want to separate your daily routine with work. Because Dex is visually very different you can use it as a sort of "focus mode", which works great for me personally.

    Although whenever I need to do something more demanding than Excel I tend to just remote to my home PC.

    I should also mention that I am studying at a uni, so unless I need to work away from home specifically and if it's not related to studying then Dex doesn't get used much and I just stick to conventional means of consuming media.

    But I do know people who straight up replaced their PCs with that thing, depends on your use-case scenario.

  • "fact-checking" was a bit of a crude way of putting it on my part. I'm not native, so there could've misused it.

    (Went a bit overboard with a wall of text again, but of well)

    Although it wasn't without the fact-checking in it's normal sense. Take "English as a foreign language", for example. One teacher will say the word is pronounced one way, the other will say its different. Who's right? Let's check Cambridge dictionary. Although it isn't always teacher's fault as a professional. Sometimes you just forget things no matter how well you know them.

    The other part that I may have failed to convey is looking information up, be it a math formulae, a word, some sort of rule, name or a date.

    It's way quicker than going through your books and is actually not a bad way to remember something. You either have a tab left off or you're seeing it when using the search, which makes you remember that you did look that up a while back. It's very minor, but because you're still being reminded about it from time to time, the information sticks. Essentially you're doing unintentional passive memorisation.

    That's why I think that maybe not in primary, but definetly in secondary and high school banning technology is not the way to go about it. If the student uses it for entertainment during class, they won't suddenly start studying if you prohibit them from usining it. You're essentially solving a non-issue, because the majority of students aren't even using phones during classes (Well, maybe to cheat on tests, but that's hurting the quality of assessment and not education itself).

    Banning phones is easy, but it's also the least impactful thing you could to to "improve" educational system. It would be of more sognificance you were to reduce classes to 8 pupils, lessen teacher's paperwork, introduce new active teaching practices, reward students for persuing their endevours and so on. But that's difficult, banning phones is easy and brings you more polical approval.

  • I would still disagree about phone usage.

    Even when in school, phone helped me quite a bit with education. Having a way to do a quick fact-check is invaluable.

    Now as I'm finishing getting my degree such devices became an inseparable part of the process.

    Yes, you may not always listen to what's being said whilst using them, but lets be frank, you wouldn't be listening to those parts either way.

    School education in a lot of places is fundamentally flawed. It's extremely difficult to learn when you're expected to absorb information just by listening and writing.

    I'd agree with OPs sentiment here, off-topic smartphone usage isn't the cause for worse education, but instead is a result of poor engagement in the first place. Should people be more engaged in the topic then suddenly smartphones start being used as a studying tool and not for entertainment. There are many ways of achieving that, but that's a whole different story.

  • Another way that I became quite fond of using is Rufus.

    When creating a distro it allows you to customize it. Set up language beforehand, a local account, remove hardware requirements and data collection by simply checking some boxes.

    It's a very handy tool, saves a lot of headache with this bloody install.

  • Not every digital signature is legally binding, I'm afraid.

    In my country, there are 3 types of it. A simple one (login/password), unqualified (encrypted series of numbers), and qualified (same as unqualified, but encrypted using certified means by government). The last two are stored on a physical drive.

    The higher the grade, the more legal power the signature holds.

    When signing it by hand from a tablet it's the same as signing it personally where I live. Which, unlike qualified digital signature, can be used for any document.

  • I used to think the same.

    Turns out they are a good alternative to laptops.

    If you don't need powerful hardware, then tablets allow to save space in the backpack, are way lighter and always have a touch screen, which in connection with a stylus is big deal for taking notes. Laptops with a touch screen, in comparison, cost way more (at least where I live they do).

    Personally, I use it for studying and media consumption. It replaced almost all of my paper. You can also sign documents using those (depends on laws in your country). Inserting photos into documents is one thing you can't do as easily with laptops as well.

    And when I do need access to better hardware, I just remote to my PC at home.

  • Wait, by "dedicated PC room" did you mean like an office room?

    If so, for me it's a matter of how private I want it to be or wether or not I want to separate it from other tasks.

    Personally, I'd rather separate work than gaming from my daily life. Like kitchen, I like my kitchen connected to the living room, so I can spend time with others while cooking. Whereas with work I kinda need to concentrate, so everything else would be too distracting.

  • Most certainly don't. After all, it's a luxury having a separate room specifically for your PC and other technical appliances.

    However, you've said it yourself that it does keep things quiet. Not to mention that this way you could also connect a custom loop to your heating and make the components run cool with the heat coming off of it being put to good use. At this point you might as well make a server.

    The downsides, beside the cost, are that you won't see your creation. PC is something you put your soul into, picking all of the parts, making them all fit together the way you want them to, and if you spend time making it look pretty, it may as well serve as a decoration on your desk.

    Not to mention that it's simply easier to just put it beside your monitor, and to troubleshoot it if something happens.

  • I'm missing one key detail here.

    What are your criteria for a mechanic being predatory?

    Heed to my long explanation of what I would consider predatory or not:

    In my opinion, a predatory mechanic is one that is set to make you spend more money by means of obfuscation.

    So, obstacles to progression, purchases with no affirmation, currency obscuring and etc.

    In this way, for example, if an item can only be bought with non-tradable premium currency, the currency is predatory. However, if the currency is tradable then it isn't predatory because it's main purpose lies in trading and not obfuscation.

    Same way gacha is also a predatory mechanic, gambling is predatory, and loot boxes. Because you don't explicitly know what you're getting and how much it costs you to get the thing you want.

    Therefore to me a free battlepass cannot be considered predatory, as it's main purpose is to increase level of player engagement.

    I would agree, however, that making BP permanent would make it a much nicer feature. As in, you can work towards completing previous BPs you've missed. Otherwise it's kinda meh. I don't particularly like them anyways, it's a pretty lazy way of achieving that goal.

  • Warframe's "BP" system is the most non-intrusive out of all games with BP that I've played.

    I was disappointed when saw it initially as well. But on closer inspection, it is completely free, you're not being locked to playing on a certain week to get the missions done and, what I recently found out after years of not playing the game, is that old rewards return to BP on low levels.

    This essentially makes it very easy to catch up should you choose to.

    About player interactions, toxicity happens, but it happens in every online game. You can't really expect an MMO game to not have player interactions.

    I too am a little anxious when dealing with people I don't know, but it really is not that big of a deal. If you're actually having problems with it, consider seeking advice from a specialist.

    Having an auction house, although is nice from a convenience point of view, could be going against the design of the game. A bazaar type of trading has it's own charms, and some people may prefer it. Either one is fine with me, personally.

    Most of what you've listed don't sound like problems with the game itself, but rather the game being just not for you. And it is normal.

    And trust me, there are quite a few problems with warframe, especially for newer players. Like the story not being explicit, you being thrown into the game with no real set goal, game mechanics not being explained properly and so on, which makes you have wiki open on the side to play the game without issues.

  • If we're being completely honest, all of those are in rotation and although some items cannot be grinded for during that time, it can still be traded for, so it is not an issue.

    Dailies and weeklies are here to keep you engaged. They provide some rewards, but I wouldn't call them mandatory to progression. They're more of a side-bonus.

    Personally, whenever I'm bored of warframe I just leave. After a while new quests appear, new guns and all of the other stuff to work toward.

    The best part is that whenever you return you're pretty much at the same place as you left it off.

    Hence I personally see no rush in getting all of the stuff I want. I've been playing this game on and off since 2013 and have yet to experience fomo with it, because of the things listed above.

    Destiny, for example, is much much worse. Especially after they decided that it's a good idea to vault planets and remove quests. Made me leave the game, I just can't deal with it and have life stuff to do. Mind you, D2 is easily one of my most most favourite games.

    Same with gacha games like Genshin or Honkai 3rd. It's exhausting.

    Didn't have that experience with Warframe.

  • Since my lemmy crashes when trying to edit the post, I'll leave an update as a comment.

    For now I've limited wattage supplied to CPU, which solved the issue.

    So, basically, there are only 3 options which could be the cause.

    1. Wrong automatic motherboard settings. Which seems to be the most likely option.
    2. PSU protection gets wrongly triggered. That would be unusual, this particular model should be reliable.
    3. Faulty CPU. This is even less likely due to the way they're manifactured.
  • I would actually love to hear you elaborate on that.

    In what way sociologists work harder than economists?

    I'd argue that when it comes to science, you can't study economics without studying sociology and politics. Because then you will be lacking context. Wouldn't that mean more research?

    In fact, how do you define "hard work"?

    I'm acually curious, it's an interesting topic.

  • It isn't a difficult science from a learner's PoV.

    It is, however, difficult in a sense of trying to figure out why in the world what happened happened, and most importantly, making it possible to do again.

    That's because not only can you not experiment, you only gather data from observations, but once you share the product of your studies the reality changes in reacton to it.

    In same Physics the object of your studies doesn't simultaniously study you.

    Math gets involved to get a result that is somewhat reproducable. But even then since we can't factor everything we use degrees of probability/certainty.

    Theoretically speaking if we managed to fully understand human behaviour then we coult predict the outcome of everything. As you can imagine, we're nowhere close to being able to do that.

    Back to original post, yes, economics is closer to psychology than it is to physics. At least for the fact that we study human behaviour, but on a different scale. So sociology and political science are the closest, then psychology, next all of biological sciences, and chemistry, physics and everything related come last pretty much.

    Math doesn't fit anywhere here, since it's a tool for measuring reality and not a study of reality itself.