You've essentially described exactly what the issue is. All these companies want you to continue subscribing, so you owning anything isn't in their interest
As much as I hate that this is happening, I think once you turn to digital media, it's incredibly difficult to go back. The convenience of having your stuff at a click of a button is just too good.
That said, if you're into movies specifically, i'd personally still go the route of buying a disk, and ripping it to your local storage, but that's both expensive, and inconvenient in terms of space
Half of the features launched with iOS 18.x don’t work in Europe. I’m glad i don’t need to turn off any AI bullshit myself, but screen mirroring? Why the hell is that region locked
If yield rates aren't a good metric, what does he think is then? It's certainly not layoff numbers, or C-suite compensation.
If after all that investment you're only able to produce TEN PERCENT of the product successfully, that's a failure, by definition. Even if they quintuple the yields, that's still incredibly poor
Hopefully it will bring some decent generational improvements. The only thing i'm not a huge fan of is the 45% price increase over lasts gen, which isn't even putting used or discounted cards into consideration
That shouldn't really be news to anyone. They've stretched themselves almost too thin with the scale of Elden Ring, and it's a miracle, that it's turned out this damn good.
But even besides that, I'd always take a well put together game every 5 years, than some uninspired yearly slop. Good games are still art
My experience is aligned with this. I've barely had any issues at all, especially in the 6.x cycle.
There was one pretty annoying panel bug, which was caused by Nvidia, but i've sent them reports, and they fixed it in the next driver release. The other one is a thirdparty addon, where under a certain setting combination, your shell would occasionally restart, but again that's not a Plasma bug
For nix-darwin specifically, the cleaned up build process, and SDK packaging is nice. It hasn't eliminated all the issues, but a lot of those are less of a fault of Nix, and more an issue with macOS design. Hoping they can be addressed somehow, but for now, the issues with workarounds are tracked.
And just in general, Python has kind of been a pain in the ass to understand, so any improvement is exciting, as i'm still learning how things work here.
A bunch of packages I want got officially merged or updated during this release cycle too, and as much as I appreciate thirdparty flakes, I don't want to rely on them too much
Have they maybe considered just studying?