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  • No, hold on, those two things aren't remotely the same.

    It makes sense to work out which kid belongs to which parent, for sure. For one thing, a whole bunch of the legal system is based on who inherits what when people die. You want some way to keep track of that. There's some weirdness about keeping track of the father rather than the mother, and some cultures keep track of both or of the mother first, which makes more sense, but that's a different conversation.

    But "who's paired up with who"? Absolutely not. Why would it be more convenient to be unable to separate sexual partners from descendants? That is not a practical thing. And the stuff that's preserving, which is that women are historically treated like children without full legal autonomy and part of the stuff being managed by a paterfamilias, is fortunately no longer true.

    And of course once that gets recognized enough that even a bunch of Christianity admits that not all relationships are forever and reintroduces divorce (after centuries of treating women like perpetual property of their husbands) it makes absolutely no sense to have half the population ping-pong between names over their lifetime an arbitrary number of times. It's not only logically absurd, it is actively inconvenient to both the first goal of pairing descendants but also administrative bookkeeping in general. I can only imagine the amount of public records errors induced by women changing their name a bunch of times over their lifetimes.

  • Okay, but what says their perspective takes precedence? You're saying it's normal for them. Cool. I'm saying it's not normal for us.

    Why is their normal a higher priority than our not normal? Either "normal" is a meaningless concept or you need a better justification than that.

  • No, wait, why can you phrase it that way but not "it's not normal but they think it is".

    Why is one of those statements not equivalent to the other?

  • Okay, so it's not normal.

    It's me speaking, I say it's not normal here, so it's not normal. By your definition.

    Of course if we dispense with the pendantry we would argue that the point of saying it's not normal is to highlight how it's inconsistent with the approach of society towards the rest of itself, so a society where women change their name to take their husband's is not normal because it's inconsistent with the rest of the mores regarding the interactions between men and women.

    But that'd require not nitpicking a thing to pick a pedantic fight online that is a waste of time, so... not in the scope of this conversation, I suppose.

  • You added "a lot of places". It's not typical or expected here, so it's not normal here.

    So "normalcy" on this is geographically bound. So is it normal if my normal and your normal are different and the Internet is making us rub our normals together?

    Told you it was a waste of time.

  • No it is not.

    Voting with your wallet does nothing. It's a neoliberal fiction capitalism uses to pretend regulation is unnecessary.

    Voting with your wallet is dependent on everybody else with a wallet even knowing that there's something to vote about. Most people don't.

    And voting with your wallet means you have a tiny wallet in a world with a TON of tiny wallets and a few very big, huge-ass humongous wallets, so your wallet vote doesn't count for crap compared with your one-vote-per-person vote, if you have access to one of those.

    So no, voting with your wallet is barely useful at best, just the normal flow of the market ideally, entirely pointless at worst.

  • Every part of that statement is arguable and every argument would be a bit of a waste of time, so we can probably leave it there.

    It's definitely not what most do where I'm from, though. It's not a thing at all.

  • Oh, you wanna get weird about it, try going to a place where they drive on the other side of the road.

    You'll want to look the right way. Your brain knows it should be backwards, and you will be physically unable to do it.

    And then if you stay long enough it'll switch and be switched now and it feels like you randomly became left handed or something.

  • Man, the idea of people changing names based on who they bang is so wild to me.

    I can't believe how much of the world just... goes with it and thinks it's normal. It's definitely not normal. Just some serious psychosexual patriarchy mindfuck going on for so many people.

    Anglosaxon cultures out there arguing about pronouns and it turns out they just casually rewrite their identity based on who's the owner of their daughters going into the second quarter of the 21st century. Nuts.

  • I'm on the vertical train, too, for reasons beyond my control and quite physically uncomfortable, unfortunately.

    My current choice to split the difference between sore wrists and crappy performance is the Razer Pro Click V2 Vertical. I wasn't sure about the shape at first, but I got used to it super fast and it's really comfy and fast enough for gaming.

  • Those do typically come with the firmware update bundled in the cart.

    Ironically this is a security measure because it also closes security loopholes and jailbreaking exploits.

    Of course for that you need a cartridge that actually has something in it or whatever, but that's the idea. You're more likely to have a firmware update in a physical game than the full playable game.

  • Because Banana!

    But no, seriously, you can rage all you want about brands and corporations, but in cultural industries content is always king.

    That's why you need regulation. You can't expect people to not play or watch cool stuff just because you're aware of and latched onto some particular moral, ethical or economical transgression. It's res publica to prevent the misbehavior so people don't have to have a stance on the extent of licensing for software/hardware combo services whenever their kid wants the cute gorilla game.

    And yes, I do own a Switch 2.

  • And extra pants, in the events of ninja attacks.

  • I say this from the bottom of my heart with genuine curiosity...

    ...what in the anglosaxon is this?

  • Man, I pack like I'm going on a black ops mission. Exact number of each piece of clothing each time, all prepared to fit on carry-on. Just enough clothes that if I needed any more I'd need to find a way to do laundry anyway.

    A couple times I´ve miscalculated and had to buy a t-shirt on site or something, but hey, worth it.

    Also, I thought they shot the last two seasons back to back for biological reasons. What the hell took three years and change?

  • I own a couple that were only distributed in this region that way in an acceptable format for weird reasons related to localization. And then I moved internationally a couple of times and the Microsoft store REALLY isn't willing to understand that's a thing that can happen. It's been a bit of a mess and one of the multiple reasons to not use MS's store as a package/software manager in the first place.

  • I mean, it... does look pretty cool, honestly.

  • I don't use Reddit beyond Google searches. This is not Reddit in pretty much any way, it's a 1990s forums. There are four people here, and they're all my frenemies.

    Mastodon was Twitter if Twitter only spoke about Twitter and Mastodon. I don't use Mastodon anymore.

  • Probably not, but you're underestimating the value of presets and standards, I think. It's less about shipping Unreal defaults and probably more about working with a bunch of outsourcing studios or even buying assets from a storefront with some confidence that everything is going to work.

    I don't think it's as much a AAA problem, where people will have dedicated engine teams, systems engineers and a whole team managing outsourcing and more about smaller AA and indies where people are wearing multiple hats and less willing to deal with anything they don't have to. AAA will use Unreal for other reasons.

    Ultimately it's the old open source chestnut of someone going "who cares if the UX isn't as good, it does everything you need it to do with a bit of effort" and proceeding to win that argument into everybody still using the proprietary alternative.

    FWIW, Unity struggled a lot to shed the "multiplatform indie engine for phones" stuff and it took a hell of a bunch of active proselytism to start presenting themselves as competitive for other types of things before they decided to poop all over that effort. There's no reason it'd be any easier for Godot.

  • There's supposed to be a bunch of that in Doom Patrol as well, it's just that... well, the type of production that show is just doesn't allow for it, both creatively and in terms of what it's able of constructing visually.