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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/)TE
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2 yr. ago

  • My favorite was a doctor who told two separate people in my wife's family to apply tiger balm to the affected area until the pain goes away. After a second diagnosis, the first issue turned out to be an issue with the growth plate in their wrist, and the second issue was a broken leg. Both required surgery.

    Doing just about anything that isn't going to the first doctor would have been a more productive use of time. At least a crappy chatbot could tell them to use tiger balm right away without leaving the house.

  • It's been years since I last played, but back then you could tell the devs genuinely loved their game and were passionate to build it up. I hope the same is true today, and considering the game is still actively developed, I'd imagine it is.

  • Honestly, I have no issue with exclusives as long as they get released on another platform after a while. Sony's been good about releasing a lot of the hits on PC after a couple years, so aside from missing the initial hype, I haven't really missed out being PC only.

    Exclusives that stay exclusive indefinitely, I basically treat those games as if they don't exist. I don't have anywhere to put a PS5, nor a desire to get one really, and as far as I know they make most of their money from game sales anyway. I don't see much value in them locking people out of their games completely.

  • Part of the issue is I see people post opinions as though they are facts and in an unnecessarily argumentative manner rather than a constructive one. Those posts would be none of the three, but present themselves as at least one. Less of an issue on Beehaw I'll say at least.

    Generally if something is true and constructive, I view those posts/comments as useful. They don't need to be kind. Just don't make them unnecessarily abrasive.

  • If this chart is being used solely to represent BMI of a population and is not actually measuring health, it does seem a bit misleading. At the very least, the other comments do seem to be misinterpreting the chart as being representative of the health of a population.

    I'm of course not saying that the US health-wise is any better than the chart represents. Just that as is, the chart is at best useless (except under super niche circumstances) and at worst misleading.

  • BMI alone is not a good metric for populations, unless you also acknowledge the error rate. This study, for example, found that it was very inaccurate when used as a sole measure of obesity. From the abstract:

    Using BMI categories as the main indicator of health, an estimated 74 936 678 US adults are misclassified as cardiometabolically unhealthy or cardiometabolically healthy.

    In a population of around 330 million, that is around a 23% misclassification rate.

  • BMI is not a good measurement of obesity. Atheletes who are hyper muscular can be considered obese by this metric, for example.

    I don't doubt that obesity is bad in the US, but I do hope they used a better metric than BMI to measure it.

  • Shadow of Mordor took me two attempts to get into it, but I'm glad I went back for the second attempt because the game ended up surprising me with how excellent the storytelling and gameplay was.

    Shadow of War was pretty good as well, but the online stuff was starting to kill it for me and it was clearly designed with microtransactions in mind (even though I believe they removed them?). Still a fun game though, and didn't feel like a waste of money especially on sale.

    A new entry in the series could be a lot of fun if they held true to what made Shadow of Mordor such a fun game, in my opinion.

  • The early entries in the Ratchet & Clank series. I believe they remastered the first three at some point for PS3, but I'd love to see them updated again to today's definition of HD and released on PC as well. Unfortunately I only played the first four games back on PS2 since I switched to full PC gaming since then, but those games were all a lot of fun. After playing the recent PC port of Rift Apart, it made me realize how much I missed playing the series, and if they remastered and ported the entire series to PC, I'd easily lose an entire paycheck to that.

  • Because US politics might actually become less about who gets the most likes on social media. Look, I don't know, but I can say after our previous presidency that the platform can't be entirely beneficial to the US.

  • Police identified the suspect as a radical 40-year-old Jewish American tourist and said initial questioning suggested he smashed the statues because he considered them “to be idolatrous and contrary to the Torah.”

    I can tell you the common part of this is not the "American" in them. Similarly, it wouldn't be fair to call this common to Jewish people either, the vast majority are decent human beings with some level of respect from my experience.

    As for loud and obnoxious, having visited many countries, the "loud and obnoxious foreigners" vary from country to country. I've seen it used to describe British, French, Chinese, Australians, and in some countries anybody who isn't from that country.

  • Maybe, but Americans aren't all "pushy" and "stupid". Noting a trend is one thing, making a generalized statement is another. The person in the article is Jewish-American. Try replacing "Americans" with "Jews" in your original comment and see how that reads.

  • Yep, bias exists everywhere. There's no avoiding it. Reddit does have the benefit that biases tend to change from sub to sub though. Lemmy instances that I've seen (not defederated ones) tend to hold the same FOSS bias, but the intensity of it varies from instance to instance.

  • I still wonder how generalizing over 300 million people by the actions of one tourist makes sense. There are a lot of things that would be easier to point at, like the Christian extremists and the alt-right (although from my experience many of them don't actually leave the country very often). Still, sweeping generalizations like this cause much more harm than good.

  • Agreed, feels like the vast majority of people here are FOSS enthusiasts, which isn't a bad thing necessarily if you align with them, but definitely a bias and could put off people who genuinely don't care about FOSS or tech in general.

  • Not sure about other companies, but at the one I work at, recommending a training doesn't mean a whole lot except "this might be relevant to your work". For example, in this case an employee expressed concerns of being discriminated against, so it makes sense to recommend training on how to identify and address those kinds of problems (even if no such situation is actually occurring) so that you're better prepared to handle it.