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2 yr. ago

  • I have an anecdote with some long-ish accompanying rambling nonsense that boils down to agreeing with you.

    I've had Linux systems on and off for years. I think I started on Slackware (it's been too long to remember). I just installed EndeavourOS on a laptop with good compatibility the other day.

    First, systemd-boot problems. Fine. Live USB, command line. Fixed. Then Bluetooth problems. Edit config file. Fixed. Wouldn't connect my third monitor. Another config file, apparently. Fixed. Wouldn't switch to my dGPU. Still not fixed, but at this point I have lost interest in fixing. So no gaming on Linux on that system because I can't be bothered.

    I also loaded Windows because I prefer a fresh install to removing bloatware. Installed. That's it. It worked. Bluetooth, third monitor, GPU switching, the works.

    Once it's running, assuming I don't run into the same problem you're running into, Linux is fairly bulletproof. But your average person has no interest in editing config files and playing around in the terminal. They want to buy a computer, maybe install a browser they're comfortable with, and get on the Internet to do whatever internety things they do. They don't need to spend time getting things just right because they live in a web browser and possibly Office (although that number is pretty small for home users).

    People don't care. You're right, life is too short. I want to go to a concert, go sing karaoke, ride a motorcycle, build a cabinet, play a game, or go have a drink. Others may want to go watch sports, go hiking, go rock climbing, go to a wine tasting, or go out with coworkers. Grandpa wants to whittle on the back porch and maybe cook some ribs. College kids have school, parties, social clubs, and activities.

    When Linux is someone's hobby, that's great! It means they like something and I'm all for people enjoying themselves. But I think a lot of those folks forget that most people just can't care about how they get to the Internet as long as they can get there. Because all a laptop is to most people is an Internet machine.

    It would be like someone who is into woodworking as a hobby wondering why these Linux guys aren't building their own desks from scratch. They're sturdier and could last a lifetime if properly done. It's super easy to build too! Way easier than those wobbly things from Amazon and made of real wood.

  • Yep. I use it to check my code, summarize boring meetings, as a rubber duck that talks back, and as a way to break down personal projects into easy to digest portions.

    It can be a super useful tool for regular folks that can't just pay someone to do that kind of stuff for them.

  • Has it gotten worse, or has it stayed the same while real people left?

    I don't ask to be a jerk. I'm genuinely curious. I don't roll over that way often anymore and when I do it's always for super specific things so I don't hit the front page.

  • I like the season and still agree with you. At the least they need a lighter touch with the topical stuff so that it's not so on the nose.

    The problem with topical cartoons set a thousand years in the future is two fold. First, life moves fast but production times don't. By the time an episode comes out either it's no longer topical or at the least the talking points are a year old. South Park gets away with it because they have short production times (ok, they used to, I haven't seen it in years so I don't know if that's still the case). Second, if it's not dated, I promise the viewers are watching a funny space show to escape the constant bombardment and fatigue of it for 23ish minutes.

    There are tropes that can be used from topical episodes that don't have to be super on the nose. How people react to an epidemic is a super interesting thing to explore and we learned a whole lot in the last few years. But that can be explored while trusting your audience.

    That's the point of speculative fiction. Explore today's problems in a way that forces you to think of tomorrow's solutions.

  • Is it really even a different suit? With the "reality is a simulation" theory it's likely whoever created the simulation offloaded a bunch of the mundane tasks to an AI that, if we were to try to interact with it, would be god.

    I'm not saying I believe any of it. And I want to make sure you know I'm not shitting on your post because I like the way you're looking at it.