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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/)FO
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2 yr. ago

  • when you're reading linguistics literature & forums you'll see variations all the way up to "propreantepenultimate" (fifth last) commonly

    meanwhile in Italian you'd just see "quintultimo" but fuck those guys amirite

  • I haven't come across a single image or video editor that doesn't support webp nowadays. I use paint.net, krita, aseprite, inkscape, ibis paint x, opentoonz, and davinci resolve, plus libreoffice if you count that, they all support importing/exporting and editing webp just as any other image file format. I'm pretty sure GIMP and Photoshop do too but I don't use them so I can't say for sure

    I feel like a majority of people have to go out of their way to make webp an inconvenience in the modern day.

    Besides, if it for some reason doesn't work in a specific situation you need it you can just manually change the extension to ".jpeg" or ".png" and Windows/Linux/Android file managers will automatically convert it. But I can guess most people don't actually face a situation like that.

  • what's wrong with webp? it's a significantly more efficient file format (like 20% less file size for the same quality) and is supported everywhere by now. if anything, the default should be webp for image types that can be both lossy and losslessly compressed

  • yea and galician "looks like" a dialect of spanish, norwegian "looks like" a dialect of danish, and afrikaans "looks like" a dialect of dutch. hell, i can say english "looks like" a dialect of ulster scots. "dialect"/"accent" and "language" are meaningless words

    that being said the text in this post is scottish english, not scots

  • Gas in my commute town in rural Georgia and nearby rural towns is around $2.90-3.20, in Macon it's $2.70-2.80, Savannah it's $2.70-2.80, in Augusta it's $2.80-2.90, and in Atlanta it's $3.20. My area has over 50k people, Macon has 234k people, Savannah 405k, Augusta 611k, and Atlanta 6.1 million. Based off of this limited data I could guess smaller urban areas have lower prices, which rise the larger they get until they eventually meet or surpass rural prices. But then you can look at Colombus with 330k population and their gas prices are $2.50-2.60, but then again it's partially in Alabama which might explain the lower prices (Alabamans are poor af)

  • You clearly don't know the challenges of leaving a country and moving to e.g. the EU or Australia or something, or any other country for that matter. Countries are extremely selective of who they want in, they likely won't accept someone unless they work in a specialization that the country is in a shortage of and is in demand. Most of the world has laws that you can't accept someone for work in a country unless you can prove that they can't find a citizen of the country to fill the position first, and afterwards they have to sponsor a work visa for you which is a lot of time, money, and paperwork for the company, so they often avoid it. It's also a lot of time, money, and paperwork for you.

    You can also work as a digital nomad provided you have enough money saved up and can sustain yourself on self-employment (you're not allowed to work under an employer on these visas), but generally this requires moving between different countries a lot because this is not a path to permanent residency. Some countries have treaties with the US that have a similar, but more lenient, process, for example the DAFT for the Netherlands which basically allows self-employed entrepeneurs to reside in the Netherlands as long as you can sustain yourself the entire time without government aid, and have a spare ~€4500 in a Dutch bank account that you can't withdraw from at all times.

    The other option is trying to get residence or citizenship by descent if you have a parent within 1-4 generations and meet certain criteria depending on what the citizenship laws of the country are – I'm in the process of trying to do this with an adoptive Slovak/Hungarian great-grandparent and adoptive German great-grandparent right now, and I can verify myself that this is also an extremely expensive and time-consuming process that I'm not sure if I can even afford to continue in the future, and the worst part is I don't even know if it will pay off because my situation is a little fuzzy and possibly doesn't count. If that doesn't work, I'm absolutely out of luck for moving out of the US; I've tracked down a majority of my biological ancestors in the past 3 centuries and none of them in the past 200 years are from outside of the US. My ancestry for basically until you get to around the 1500s or 1600s is entirely American, English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish, German, Dutch, Belgian, and French, which I'm pretty sure qualifies me for the most white Anglo-Saxon American here.

    There's one other viable choice too – attending university at another country. The problem is there are a lot of criteria you have to meet to be elligible for this in the first place (for one you have to be very young, they usually won't accept people who are past their 20s), often times American diplomas and 2-year degrees aren't seen as qualifying you for college outside of the US (in Germany they have the "Abitur" as a requirement for university instead of a diploma, which is somewhat more rigorous than an Associate's degree, and the only way they accept your high school education as enough is if you gained specific credits and pass a few AP tests while in high school, and they don't count doing those credits in college it HAS to be while you're in high school), it's highly competitive, universities are required to only accept foreigners after they've accepted all applicants who are citizens; and it can be incredibly expensive unless you're going to a country which has no tuition costs and cheap student housing, which less and less countries are doing (Norway recently closed off free tuition for new non-European applicants).

    The last options available aren't viable for a majority of people, but I'll list them out anyway. For one, you can spend hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars on property in some countries in exchange for a residence visa, a la Spain, Portugal, Cyprus' Golden Visa programs.

    Otherwise, if you can't afford that (most people trying to escape the US or poorer countries can't), you can go through literal hell and join the French Foreign Legion at a chance to ask for citizenship of France after a few years – but this is a TERRIBLE decision for anyone to make, the FFL isn't just a group of soldiers, their entire training is basically abusing you with the worst conditions they can in order to weed out those who aren't extremely tough, and the soldiers are put in the most intense, mind-and-body breaking deployments imaginable. It is scary and most people aren't built for it psychologically nor physically. Plus you're not even guaranteed citizenship, even after serving the 3-year period a lot of people are denied it.

    TL;DR, the ability to move out of a country/free-travel-area is relatively exclusive and inaccessible to most people, and only gets less realistic as time goes on due to both age and growing anti-immigrant sentiment in many countries. If you're part of a group subject to a country's systematic social & economic issues (i.e. not already in a privileged/well-off position where you can already afford to fund your education or have got the education to work in a highly wanted specialization), it's practically impossible to migrate to one of the countries that you'll have more opportunities in, even if you are part of the potential third of Americans who might qualify for citizenship by descent. It's the reason so many people risk their lives and freedom to illegally cross the border into the US and Europe every year, in a place where the system is against you it's unlikely most people have access to the means to legally move away.

  • There's not really anything that makes using your PC in the same way inconvenient, you can connect it to your TV and wirelessly connect controllers, even more conveniently. Although switching between games or using different apps while doing so means you'd have to have a m&kb beside you I think, so if you're playing with friends it might be less convenient (personally I only use controller on games that are unplayable on M&KB though, mainly emulated games)

  • romania (and the rest of eastern europe) have almost non-existent theft rates compared to literally all of western/northern europe, except for spain and portugal because everyone in those two are poor so there's nothing to steal anyways

    generally the more prosperous/capitalist the people in a country are the higher the rates of stealing are. this says a lot about our society

  • Yeah good luck with games, support on Linux has gotten way better over the years but it's still severely lacking (mainly due to anticheats or game developers intentionally not supporting Linux). Even with games that you can play on Linux, they require an annoying amount of tweaking to actually get running.

    Steam Deck gives me hope for Linux gaming but I don't think it'll ever have as much support as Windows gaming, in fact a surprisingly high amount of games have a Linux detection system that blocks Linux players because fuck you I guess...

    But you can't really blame Linux for this, it's mostly the fault of aggressive anticheat that shouldn't exist in the first place, or shitty companies wanting to block Linux players from playing their games.

    As for Nvidia, I've personally had no issue and in fact I run into more situations where having an Nvidia graphics card is better – encoding (great for recording games) and DLSS, for example. But that's just my experience, I'm sure it's just coincidental because I don't play that many games anymore.

  • That's not how game development using an engine works... RAGE likely compiles code for at minimum a majority of modern computer hardware with next to no tweaking, and probably the same with Xbox & PlayStation consoles.

    Most game engines used on large projects generally are made to handle as much of a variety of hardware as possible with little to no changes in the code – if you make a game using Unreal Engine or Unity for example it will almost certainly be able to work on Xbox, Playstation, and most PCs just fine. Most of the performance optimization for different hardware can then be offloaded to the engine. It's likely the same with RAGE.

  • Because a PC can do everything a console can do, but way better, plus way more, lol

    Consoles are completely redundant, you can get a better performing PC for the same price or lower if you wait for sales (especially when you consider the $60-120/year premium you have to pay to play console games online, Microsoft & Sony sell consoles at a loss because they know they'll suck way more money out of you from subscriptions & other "fees" you experience from console)

    Consoles are just shit value, you can't use them for anything other than what, gaming and TV? And their specs are worth less than just buying similar parts separately and putting them together. So why would I spend up to $500 plus $80 every year on a shitty console just to play a new game because of artificial exclusives that will come to PC anyways? Assuming you use your PS5 or Xbox Series X or whatever for 6-7 years, that's $1000 down the drain. And then after that you'll still have to spend a few hundred on a laptop or PC or whatever to, you know, do your job or uni or whatever, because your console that costs over $500 can't do any of that.