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[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago

As for the ages here, the people most likely to migrate are the long term Reddit users that have had an account using third party apps since 2010 or so (because younger people have only ever known the official app). That self selects for anyone that was old enough to use Reddit in 2010 back when the user base was mostly high school / college / recent college grads. Someone in their late teens / early 20s back then will be in their 30s now.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Stress is relative to your own personal conditions. It's not absolute. A tech executive might have a nice house and financial security, but if he's working 80 hours/week under intense pressure to meet some deadline, that's still stressful. Nobody wants to be perceived as a failure at work, even if their personal financial consequences for failure are minimal.

Your argument seems to imply it's impossible to feel stress if you're comfortable in life. Even the poorest Americans can count on access to food, clean running water, electricity, internet, etc. For most of humanity's existence, and still today in some parts of the world, these would be considered enormous luxuries, so anyone with access to them would be seen as extremely comfortable in life. Clearly though, people can still be stressed out despite having access to these sorts of things that most of history would consider luxurious.

Stress is relative, not absolute.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The play to earn model is literally a ponzi scheme with a fancier name. The money you earn has to come from somewhere. It doesn't appear out of thin air. In 100% of P2E games, the earliest players get paid by the revenue from later players. Eventually, the game stops growing, so the later players are left holding the bag.

Obviously, some people make a lot of money in ponzi schemes (most notably, the people that start the ponzi scheme in the first place), but it's a terrible design for people that aren't the ponzi creators or the first adopters lucky enough to get in on the ground floor.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Looks like the markets are pretty apathetic to the news today. Economists had expected 225K jobs added, so the 209K is a little below expectations, but not a huge miss. Unemployment remains at a very healthy 3.6% mirroring the pre-pandemic landscape with one of the lowest rates in decades.

I wonder how much of this low unemployment is demographic. Aside from the pandemic, the last decade has been marked by increasing Baby Boomer retirements (in 2023, the youngest Boomers turn 59, and the oldest are 77). While that large cohort is leaving the workplace, the cohorts behind it are smaller (in relative terms, not absolute terms), so there are more roles to fill with fewer people to fill them. That allows employees to be choosier when looking for jobs, which has been great for the average worker.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Why? You should let each post stand on it's own merit.

First, account age is silly for Lemmy, as almost 100% of people on here will have an account creation date in June 2023 or later because this place was a ghost town before Reddit decided to kill the APIs. A month from now, is someone with an August 2023 join date automatically presumed to be a troll, or are they just someone making the switch from Reddit a month later than everyone else?

As for karma, neither negative karma nor positive karma really tell you anything about the poster:

For instance, people can make good faith arguments advocating for conservative political opinions, but because the user base skews pretty far left here, those arguments will be downvoted. A discussion forum that bans opposing viewpoints is useless, and the echo chambers on Reddit are something I'd love to avoid here.

Similarly, it's also possible to effortlessly build positive karma. Simply copy/paste highly rated comments from the last time a common repost appeared on the feed, and chances are, your copy/pasted comments will get upvoted too. You can even automate it with a bot.

Karma meant nothing at Reddit, and moderators shouldn't be using it for decisionmaking purposes. It's useful for ranking posts and comments, but anything beyond that isn't helpful.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Interesting. Millenials are pushing 40 now, so not sure if we still have the angst we did as teenagers, but I'm curious what this will look like. Barney was always viscerally hated on elementary school playgrounds in the 1990s though, for reasons that I still don't really understand today. The show was what would now be referred to as toxic positivity aimed at young children, but there were tons of shows like that, so I never really understood why Barney got all of the hate rather than the other shows with identical premises.

I guess Barney is the TV version of Nickelback. Nickelback was just one of dozens of buttrock bands from the early 2000s, but for some reason, they attracted all the hate for the entire genre. Come to think of it, Nickleback should be on the movie's soundtrack.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Open Street Map is legitimate. In bicycling communities, Strava is the gold standard app for tracking rides, and it uses Open Street Maps on the backend. It's always super accurate for me, even for fairly obscure bike trails off the beaten path.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

Just as a quick FYI, on the PS4 (and presumably the PS5 too), if you click on any of the hidden trophies, you can press square (I think) to show the description of how to earn it. This wasn't possible in the PS3 era, but it's one of the upgrades they implemented in PS4. That'll save you a Google search.

As for why, as others have mentioned, it's mostly for spoilers or hiding easter eggs that are more fun if you find them naturally rather than going out of your way looking to earn a trophy.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

I agree, though hopefully this will pass with time as people default to Lemmy rather than Reddit for their downtime. That said, when the Titan submersible craft story broke a week or two ago, there was decent discussion on here. For the most part, comment threads are a ghost town aside from threads bitching about Reddit, but there are occasional exceptions to the rule that should become more common as people get adjusted here.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Spotify

Strava

Default alarm clock app

If it weren't for Spotify and Strava for bike rides, I would gladly get rid of my smartphone and replace it with a flip phone. Life was better before the entire internet traveled with you everywhere you go.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Can't speak for the other apps, but on Jerboa, I get a "Network Error" every time I try to post. The post will go through, but from my end, it looks like it didn't go through. A lot of people are getting similar messages, hence the double posts. All growing pains for a site not ready for the mass migration into Lemmy.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The past 15 years of growth in anything technology adjacent has been fueled by one thing: Extremely cheap debt. Interest rates have at been rock bottom since the 2008 crisis, and they've only started to tick up recently. That means the ability to fund infinite growth for basically nothing, so tech companies have relied heavily on debt financing.

Now though, that's no longer viable. Silicon Valley Bank was very heavily involved with all these tech companies, and it went insolvent in March largely because of rising interest rates. They held a lot of long term bonds at low interest rates. In normal conditions, rising interest rates mean lower bond prices and unrealized losses, but not a major problem because they can just hold them to maturity and never realize the loss. Bank runs forced SVB to sell the bonds for huge losses though, turning unrealized losses into realized losses, and a non-issue into a major problem.

Now that cheap debt is gone, these tech companies are desperately scrambling to attain profitability. It hasn't been discussed much, but this is a big reason for the changes at both Twitter and Reddit.

 

I'm hoping this can be the replacement for /r/trophies? If so, I'd love to start contributing here. Maybe we can get a discussion going to try to build the community? I haven't earned any platinums recently, but I have earned a few bronze/silver/gold trophies in a bunch of different games, and I'm betting a lot of others have too. To that end, over the last month or so, what have been your favorite non-platinum trophies, and why? Try to avoid posting spoilers for story-based trophies, but other than that, let me hear your favorites!

 

Any way this can be fixed in a future release? I've only done a little bit of coding in the past, but this sounds like an index matching error with a hopefully quick fix (i.e., specifying "TopDay" is supposed to return the Xth item in a list, but it's returning the X+1th item instead, hence the sort by old). As a result, Jerboa always shows me posts from four years ago when I open the app.

 

The June PS+ Essential games came out last week, but with Reddit dying/dead, I'd like to start a community for this here, hence the late post. Have any of you guys checked out the games yet? Initial thoughts on any of the titles? Worth checking any of these out, or is this a month to play other games?

 

Not sure if I'm doing this correctly, but I just created an account earlier today moving away from Reddit and onto Lemmy. The Reddit baseball community was one of the best places on the site full of interesting discussion, a bunch of dumb jokes, and a generally happy userbase that doesn't take the game too seriously (salty people that can't handle a loss are a big problem with a lot of the other online forums discussing baseball). With RIF's impending shutdown, I'm interested in a non-Reddit alternative. Hopefully, Lemmy is it? Are there any other baseball fans on this site yet? I searched "baseball" and found this empty community (kind of like a subreddit?), but I have no idea if this is the "real" baseball group or not.

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