Bronzie

joined 2 years ago
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[–] Bronzie 5 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (1 children)

Yeah we swapped over to the PS5 DualSense. So much nicer.

Edit: only works on Homebrewed Switch sadly

[–] Bronzie 1 points 4 months ago

Yeah Memmy still has some issues it seems.

Happy you solved it though! I’m hoping for a new Shield when the new Switch arrives so I can ditch it myself. It works, but you can really tell it’s strugling on the higher bitrate files.

Have a great summer mate

[–] Bronzie 8 points 4 months ago (1 children)

We tried that in Europe. We bought oil and gas en masse from Russia. Companies opened factories there. We thought that by showing them that cooperation is better than the cold war, we can all move forward.

Then they attacked Ukraine.

Honestly mate: your quest not to pick side is sort of understandable. The world feels like a crap place these days with wars, rising prices and political unrest. While I generally dislike painting the world in black and white, it is sometimes necessary to accept that some issues are. This is one of those times.

Russia viciously and brutally invaded and terrorise Ukraine and her people, and that is not right. Appeasing to their moronic demands is not an option anyone should even be considering after all the pain and suffering they have caused.

We don’t reward this kind of behaviour, ever. It only brings more pain down the road.

Thanks for the chat and have a great summer, mate.

[–] Bronzie 10 points 4 months ago (3 children)

Honestly, if another cold war is the outcome of us stepping up for what is right in this world, then I think it's a better alternative than giving into any dicators demands.

Don't get me wrong: I don't want it, but the alternative is everlasting certainty for Putin and future cronies that attacking sovereign countries is totally fine as long as he has nukes.

So to answer your question: the general idea to avoid this is to make sure everybody knows the west wants no war, but we will not sit idly by and watch it unfold right on our doorstep. And we are strong enough to beat you if it comes to that.

You don't need allways to fight the bully to make him stop. You just need to make sure he knows you will fight and he most likely will lose.

[–] Bronzie 10 points 4 months ago (5 children)

I’ll give you the benefit of the doubt then, mostly because I agree with you that the best solution is the one where the fewest amount of people die.

I think where we diverge is how to achieve this. From what we’ve seen so far, Ukraine surrendering would probably not end the war. At least long term. Russia would use the time to re-arm and retry. Even if they don’t, the people in these new russian territories would be poorly treated and potentially murdered, especially those disagreeing with the peace agreement. That is my honest opinion. Therefore, the only other ways are Russia going home or Ukraine beating them.

The first one isn’t happening, so we end up alternative three.

Do you agree or disagree with my assessment?

[–] Bronzie 20 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

NATO has been on their doorstep since its inception, so this argument is unreasonable.

Norway is a founding member and share a border with them.

[–] Bronzie 20 points 4 months ago (12 children)

Now why would they fear Ukraine joining a non-confontational alliance?

And how do you rationalize the fear of your neighbour making new friends by physically attacking them?

I don’t know if you are a russian bot or actually conflicted so I’m giving you a chance to explain what you think Ukraine should really do. In my mind, bowing down to a bully is never ever the answer and support any aid they get in their purely defensive war.

[–] Bronzie 44 points 4 months ago (24 children)

Is there any chance this will ever pass?

I don’t really know what it would take to get this done

[–] Bronzie 1 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Since it works fine on all other devices, I guess you could exclude the server.

Did you try deleting the server client side and re-adding it? That has solved some issues for me on the Chromecast.

Also: the logs are missing

[–] Bronzie 3 points 4 months ago

Just to tack on and expand on your first point: LED monitors are normally LCD displays but with LED backligthing, allowing for more zone control and it is more efficient both with space and energy usage.

For TV’s, burn in is becomming less of an issue due to software in newer models and improvements in the tech. The same goes for phones. Older OLED phones like the Pixel 2 I think, had issues with burn-in.

Rtings is actually doing a long term torture test as we write. They have also included some PC monitors for good meassure.

In general, the reason why it’s still not perfect for PC is that all office/daily use retains a static image on a large portion on your screen. Imagine a browser, Excel or program with a big static toolbar. This will cause issues even with pixel shift and refresh cycles. You can only move pixels so much without it affecting your experience.

If you were to only game or watch movies on it, it would likely never show signs of burn-in.

Hope this made sense

[–] Bronzie 2 points 4 months ago

Thank you, friend!

[–] Bronzie 4 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Pretty good!

I am in parental leave for another two months so I get to play with the little one and stay home.

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