Well, somehow keyboards are now a niche boutique industry where people spend hundreds of dollars putting together custom-made minimalist builds like they're honing a weapon in an action movie. I find that's probably dumber than a corporate logo becominmg a default key (which to be fair has been a thing since the 80s, the C64 had a Commodore key), but it does mean that if don't want it, you can get a keycap with anything you want on it instead.
Fair enough. Alt used to be that before we decided to have a button to annoyingly pop up the menu strip. And there's still Alt Gr for that in full sized keyboards if we want to go back that way.
I don't remember the last time I pressed the "right click" contextual menu key, so honestly it's not like it'll be too annoying. Unless they do replace an actually useful key, at which point I guess the people making "make Windows actually work good" apps will get to live another year.
Doesn't Firefox now include an email spoofer by default?
It keeps popping up to ask me on singup screens, and the one time I tried it seems to just provide a valid email and a forwarding service for TFA. I don't know if it'll work with Reddit or how effective the service is, though.
Wait, how did it go UP in 2020? Do you guys remember 2020? How could you possibly get run over by a car in 2020? Did the twelve people who still got to drive to places try extra hard? What the hell?
Oh, it's me. I'm that guy. I mean, look at my post history here. I invented being that guy, except Maher is older than me, but I'll still argue about it because I'm that guy.
It comes from being somewhat above average in school, and getting a bit of a reputation for being precocious and smart and not really having anything else going on so you may as well double down on it and have a thing. Plus if you ride that wave confidently enough it'll get you a full on career. And once you get validated by sucess, or whatever you personally consider success-adjacent enough, there's no way them kids are gonna show you up. Ever. No matter what. Every hill is worth dying on. Because that self-image. Is. All. You. Have. All you've had for decades now.
Man, I should go hug my dad. I can point at the two or three conversations we had that made me at least try not to be that asshole.
Bunch of people, mostly old dudes, have a fundamental aversion to not being the smartest person in the room. They latch on to whatever gives them the opportunity to be contrarian and in an environment of social media and disinformation they don't fully understand they spiral out into neofash, deluded stances becoming their entire persona.
Rant about something you're wrong about, get the whole internet telling you how dumb that is, get defensive because you can't be the one who's wrong, get radicalized. Welcome to the 21st century.
Source: I can't believe I didn't spiral down that toilet myself. Seriously, I should be one of those assholes. I can't believe I noticed just in time before the Internet weaponized that personality type into the death of democracy.
Saying that Tom Scott "refuses to elaborate further" may be the biggest stretch I've ever seen on the Internet.
I thought the guy was meh. Very much the middle of the road for big sci-comm Youtubers. Less annoying than some of the other really big ones. Him dropping the weekly cadence is only a bummer because I'd been tracking the passage of time by his receeding hairline, like counting rings on a tree stump.
I use ones that are explicitly labelled with a black strip. My tactic for opening them is to put them between my lips and blow, which works pretty well but got really weird during the mandatory masking periods.
You know what? You guys keep making the same argument, I guess I'll just have to keep giving the same answer.
How many is many? PC Gaming Wiki lists 1000 DRM free games in Steam's library. That is 2.6% of the service, by their count.
And all you get from those is the ability to rip loose game files, which is not the same as having an installer or a portable installation. GOG will let you download a backup installer of every game on the service. Not the same thing.
Have you guys never even tried any PC storefront that isn't Steam? And if so, why are you arguing about easily verifable facts? Go check it out, see if it's for you.
GOG does have a launcher, it's called GOG Galaxy. It's... fine to good, depending on what you want to do with it. That will download, install and patch games for you, just like Steam does.
The launcher is optional, though. If you don't want to use it, you can download installer files from the GOG site or from the launcher itself. Those are yours to store as backups. This also allows you to snapshot earlier patches and do other goo preservation stuff if that's your thing. Steam has none of those features.
You can either take my word for it or go check it out, but seriously, I'm not lying to you. Why is this an argument every time? Why are there fanboys for digital distribution services? None of this makes sense.
Alright, so you're telling me I should invest year 2 of a Backblaze sub in having a second NAS set up off-site?
That still pays off pretty quickly.
Alright, look, in all honesty, what you want is to mix and match. I'm not gonna sit here and break down my entire data storage strategy, but you do want multiple solutions in parallel. The point of NAS is that you get mass storage you fully control, so it's most cost effective for things that are huge and that you want on hand. Like, say, backing up your physical media or your digital purchases. That's pretty close to good enough, since you probably retain access to your disks or your subscriptions and the NAS acts as a backup anyway.
Sure, despite my UPS protection and data redundancies my NAS could be nuked froom orbit and all of the stuff in it could die. And Google Drive could at some point decide to just poof six months of user data into the ether. What you really want is two separate backup solutions. Just don't go nuts and acknowledge that your source media is also a copy of your media. This is an expensive rabbit hole. I still wouldn't pay thousands of dollars a year for somebody else to run my mass storage. It's more cost effective to keep the huge stuff in a NAS and perhaps a backup in a DAS box somewhere. Unless you're curating a museum or doing life and death research that's probably more than enough security for your media files.
On Steam you can back up game files only in the tiny fraction of games that ship with no DRM. Cases where you have to break DRM to make a backup are not "making a backup". If that's your standard you may as well just download a cracked copy later.
On GOG you specifically get an option to download a stand-alone installer for every game in the service.
A home NAS should also have redundancy. At the price you're quoting Backblaze would become more expensive than my current NAS setup in about what? 8 months?
How could I possibly have it backwards? I manually backed up my installers. I don't even know what you think "having it backwards" means. You think I'm misremembering downloading the installer files and backing them up? You think I did that on Steam and somehow forgot?
No, I don't have it backwards, that's how it works. There are terabytes of data on my backup drives to account for it.
Well, somehow keyboards are now a niche boutique industry where people spend hundreds of dollars putting together custom-made minimalist builds like they're honing a weapon in an action movie. I find that's probably dumber than a corporate logo becominmg a default key (which to be fair has been a thing since the 80s, the C64 had a Commodore key), but it does mean that if don't want it, you can get a keycap with anything you want on it instead.