I’m sorry, are there any different dystopias available other than this one? This one is stupid and I’d like to make an exchange if I can.
I’m sorry, are there any different dystopias available other than this one? This one is stupid and I’d like to make an exchange if I can.
I guess you can always make it shittier?
I never understood the appeal of Threads anyway. Like, who leaves Xitter because it’s toxic garbage and goes to something owned by Meta, who practically invented this particular flavor of toxic garbage?
They’re not even hiding the enshittification strategy. They’re practically teaching you the principles up front.
“First we trap you, then we exploit you. Duh.”
There’s no moral dilemma. It’s just pure moral compromise.
I’m not a vape user, but the model is the kind of thing that just makes me so angry.
In a world that makes sense:
In a world where Profit is God (the real world):
The only reason I never bought into Boox is their flagrant violation of GPL.
As another owner of the Kobo Libra Colour, I can recommend it for its excellent ergonomics and UI. Plus as a bonus, it has pen support!
Ugh. This is why we can’t have nice things.
Alternative perspective: Buy the most intrusive, ad-subsidized set you can find and disconnect/block it so you get all of the benefit and none of the privacy invasion?
they are turned on
Ooh, violate my privacy, daddy.
- Michael Scott
I was actually thinking of hinging it the other way, having the screens fold to the outside.
Interesting idea. Bezels have been made pretty thin and there have been curved display edges, but I don’t know if anyone’s ever tried a one-side zero-bezel design that you could hinge together. Bezels in the other sides are fine, but could we create a flush edge with no gap to click two screens against each other?
Only Apple has the courage to give you a crease.
Bingo. Major component of persuasive design.
The point is not whether there are more features. The point is to give you an incentive to go yearly, and in this case it’s a huge “discount” even though it’s in no way worth the monthly cost. The monthly plan isn’t meant to sell you the monthly plan. It’s meant to make the yearly plan look good.
Short version: there’s an $80 bread maker with 5 features, a $120 bread maker with 12 features, and a $475 bread maker with 14 features.
The $475 bread maker only exists to make the $120 version look like a bargain.
I asked Microsoft Copilot for names.
Nope, just tipsy.
Ugh. I hate how right you are.