The problem is that they don't communicate this and still ask for the full price.
Imagine I'm a gamer who wants to buy and play a working game today, not in half a year. Nothing on their store page indicates that the game isn't in a playable state yet, so I'd pay full price for a game I can't actually play. That's misleading at best, and a downright fraud at worst.
They could easily fix this by delaying the game or launching it as early access for people who don't mind playtesting a half-finished game, but they didn't.
Your arguments would only work if you'd argue for breaking up or nationalizing YouTube.
As long as they are a for-profit company you can't deny them the right to legally earn money the way they see fit, doesn't matter how big they are or what other revenue streams they have. Forcing them to offer a service for free is nonsense, and attacking them on a technicality that is probably easily circumvented is just a waste of everybody's time and money imo.
If we really want to do something about this then we have to break their monopoly, same as any other huge company that's f*cking with consumers.
Android: Install an app that can open YT links (like LibreTube), and set it as default handler for YT links in the settings. Alternatively Firefox Beta can use regular browser extensions, so LibRedirect should work there as well.
Is this different from mic-dubbed and line-dubbed? My impression was that those only come as mono or stereo, but many AC3D releases have surround sound.
Edit: So apparently dubbing is just the process of adding audio to a video track, sometimes replacing or complementing the original one. The quality dependends on where the audio comes from, but all of them are called "dubbed".
Really good final level, finally freeing the protagonist's younger sister at the last minute as big emotional conclusion, a beautiful view of the city at night from atop a skyscraper, a burning helicopter falling down the glass walls, and then this f*cking beautiful music starts to play! It just all came together.
Gnome. It looks simple and elegant, is easy and intuitive to use, and everything I need is either built in or available as an extension.
The one caveat is that you probably shouldn't update it right on day one of a new version release, because usually some extension devs need a few more days to update their stuff. My distro (Fedora) always releases new versions a few months after Gnome does, so this works out perfectly.
I started saying "Gesundung" as a joke 10 years ago, and now I can't stop. It's not a real word, but if it were it would mean "Getting healthy". Seemed more appropriate to me at the time, and still kinda does.
I self host a personal Piped instance, and it works without issues for me. The videos load just as quickly as on YT itself, and the UI feels faster because it's not as bloated. Setting it up was fairly easy too, I just had to customize and run the docker compose config they provide.
Personally I just think it's easier to pick out the movies and shows I want to watch, and then be sure that they will be there once I sit down to watch them. No uncertainty, no hunting down a good stream or missing episode, everything is just there and ready. The process is very simple once everything is set up, and you can still delete video files after you watch them if you want to.
One highly significant area for three different world religions means there will always be religious fundamentalists who want to throw out the other two.
When it's "freezing cold" or "ice cold" outside, what do you think is freezing? When something is "boiling hot", what is boiling exactly?
We use water to describe temperature even without using Celsius, because it's everywhere around us, and we are literally made of this stuff. It's also one of the only materials that goes through three different states in our usual temperature range, so using those as a reference point to measure temperature makes perfect sense imo.
The problem is that they don't communicate this and still ask for the full price.
Imagine I'm a gamer who wants to buy and play a working game today, not in half a year. Nothing on their store page indicates that the game isn't in a playable state yet, so I'd pay full price for a game I can't actually play. That's misleading at best, and a downright fraud at worst.
They could easily fix this by delaying the game or launching it as early access for people who don't mind playtesting a half-finished game, but they didn't.