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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/)NA
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2 yr. ago

  • D4 was dead the moment they announced D2R. Why would I pay $80 for a game with microtransactions and battlepass when I can pay $50 for a game that comes complete in box?

    They should have taken D2R kept the mechanics and just rolled new classes, maps, and items.

    I don't want a new game, I just want more content.

  • Remember when Google said that if the result you wanted wasn't on the first page that they had failed?

    The problem is the first page is now 2 sponsored links, a widget suggesting 10 YouTube videos, 5 search results for a related search, and two actual search results for the thing you are looking for.

    We almost need a browser widget that appends &page=2 to any google search result.

  • My mortgage payment plus property taxes is less than the going rental rate for an equivalent 3br suite, and I bought last year.

    The thing that convinced me is that my mortgage payment stays the same every year while everything else goes up with inflation, including my salary.

    We'll see where we're at when it's time to renew in 4 years but the way things are going even if it costs me an extra $1000/month I'm still probably coming out ahead.

  • This is the way. There are so few places to smoke in BC that I pretty much only ever see people doing it 5 metres from a bus stop.

    They are so expensive that the few people that still do it smoke maybe a pack a week.

    We even banned the sale of no-nic vape juice because they were becoming a gateway to nicotine addiction for teenagers.

  • Endeavor OS solves most of those problems. Out of box experience is fantastic, and the installer is the best I've ever used.

    That being said, I still wouldn't recommend it due to the Arch package maintainers willingness to break userspace.

    You will do a system update and it will break something. Most recent for me was Python packages. I updated my system and suddenly pip stopped working because they decided to follow PEP-668 and force the user to install packages using pacman.

    The rationale given was allowing the user to install packages outside of the distro's control can potentially break system tools like Fedora's DNF, which is python based.

    Now, I've done this on Fedora, it's not fun. But you know what else? FEDORA DOESN'T EVEN ENABLE THIS FEATURE YOU FUCKING IMBECILES.

  • I can increase my cellphone plan with the click of a button.

    If I want to decrease it that same button redirects to a live chat where I have to talk to one of their agents.

    Their agents will genuinely give you a better deal, but for some reason can't change your plan to a lesser one without breaking your contract, causing hundreds of dollars in extra fees.

    The brick and mortar agents can do it in 2 minutes with no hassle. You walk in and say I want this plan, show your id, sign the change request and you're done.

    I don't even think they are doing it on purpose. Why would they have a button that connects me to someone they are paying to convince me to give them less money per month? They cut my wife's bill in half because she is month to month.

    It's just Hanlons Razor. Supreme incompetence.

  • A good chunk of both my TikTok and YouTube feed is already Canadian content creators.

    It's in their best interest to promote local results because they tend to be more engaging.

    I doubt any of the social media platforms will have to change anything, and the streaming services already have CanCon sections.

  • Because all of the other retailers do the same shit only with higher prices. Here in Canada they don't pay their employees any less than the competition, yet their prices are 30-40% cheaper on average.

    That extra 40% doesn't result in better working conditions for the employees, it goes directly to the shareholders and bonuses for the C-suite.

    I respect the hell out of Walmart because they actually keep their price increases tied to inflation and aren't out there trying to sell a loaf of poverty white bread for $5 or a pack of 4 chicken breasts for $37.

  • My laptop is 4 years old at this point. I spent $2400 on it before I wanted something future proof, and while it's still plenty fast with it's 10th gen Intel processor and 32gb ram, knowing that I could drop $500 and upgrade to the latest AMD or Intel chip makes me wish I could have held out another year and gotten the framework.

    Given that we've more or less peaked in terms of non-gaming performance I probably won't be buying another laptop until this one dies but my next laptop will be a framework without question as well.

  • Google didn't buy HTC. They bought the parts of the company responsible for making the first Pixel phone.

    HTC is still a separate entity. They just don't release 25 phones/year now, and all of their stuff is mid-range garbage.

  • I have a $2 USB C cable I got off of Ali that I use to charge my laptop at 65W. It's rated for 100W but I have no way of testing it.

    It's actually higher quality than any official apple cable I've used, although that's a pretty low bar.

  • The argument was that Shaw and Rogers generally don't compete in the same markets. Rogers wanted Shaw to expand their presence in the west. Shaw wanted the deal because they are actually a horribly managed company and didn't want to spend the money needed to upgrade their ancient copper lines or roll out 5G towers. They are a shell of the company they were 10+ years ago.

    The one area they did compete was in wireless, and they were forced to sell off Freedom Mobile.

    Honestly as a Freedom customer this deal has been fantastic. Quebecor has done more in the past 6 months to expand their service than Shaw has done in the previous 2 years. Prices have dropped, they eliminated the nationwide data cap, rolled out 5G, and the overall quality of the service has improved substantially.

    So on the surface it sucks because we lost a major player in the tv/home internet space, but they were rapidly fading into obscurity anyway. I would have seen Quebecor buy them in their entirety and merge them with Videotron, but as it stands not much of value was lost.

  • It wasn't a ban. It was a tax designed to funnel money into the media companies that own our politicians.

    It failed spectacularly because it shows that Canadians don't visit Facebook for news coverage, and that Meta was 100% correct to not pay for access to content that its users don't care about.