planish

joined 2 years ago
[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

too expensive for there to be competition

How does that work, exactly? For something like a railroad or a power grid, you get a natural monopoly because you need a system to connect everyone to everyone else for it to really work, and you need to pay to build out the connection to each person.

For video streaming, you need to pay for servers to transcode, store, and serve the video. Which is expensive, sure. But then each user comes in over the Internet; you aren't paying to connect directly to their house, and you aren't putting a CDN node in every town when the town has 5 users who can just talk to the central deployment.

If you want to run ads, you find some network that places video ads, and you get the ads from them and you run them. Maybe they don't pay enough and the service is not profitable, but what would make that change if the service were bigger?

Where are the huge, unassailable costs? Where is the revenue you can't get unless you are the absolute biggest?

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago

native code in Chrome for detecting ad blockers within the next 12 months.

Just a new header for whether the site allows extensions that are not Google Web Protect certified.

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago

Looks like the ads worked

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago

s/grandma/Google account/

[–] planish 2 points 2 years ago

I think it's it's own thing.

The danger of advertising is not that it is able to brainwash you into changing your opinions. The danger is that repeated exposure to inauthentic stories changes your expectations, and plants paying advertisers in your memory.

This in turn allows your behavior to be controlled, especially in aggregate. You will remember company X sells a thing you want and go buy it, or you will think other people think company Y is environmentally friendly so you will pick them for your vegan barbecue party, or you will have heard of company Z and not automatically skip over their offering in a store. But since it all operates by tampering with your heuristics instead of trying to bowl over your adopted, explicit opinions, it doesn't trigger any of your protective responses.

And that's why you should never view an advertisement.

[–] planish 2 points 2 years ago

LTT reviewed a Roku one like that recently and for some reason didn't recommend immediately binning it.

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Aren't the boxes running "Android TV", the set top box oriented flavor of Android, with e.g. the launcher designed to be operated with a TV remote and not a touch screen?

They are not themselves TVs, though, and I guess nowdays it might be most common for "Android TV" to run on the TV instead of on a separate device.

[–] planish 17 points 2 years ago (6 children)

You have a device not made in China?

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I feel like this is backwards and netrw is The Way.

[–] planish 1 points 2 years ago

It really does though. Someone controls the project and decides what's in or out. Other people engineer around that project, and the current latest version of that project becomes a de facto standard.

So you can either use that and let the people who control the project be in charge, or you can find enough developer time to maintain 99% compatibility as the de facto standard project changes stuff and the ecosystem you need to use follows.

[–] planish 3 points 2 years ago

Well they clearly aren't normal posts, so I guess they're obviously ads?

Also Twitter is one man who hates laws now, so most places might need to see about enforcing that.

[–] planish 24 points 2 years ago

This is one of those British changing booths where everyone has their own changing booth for some reason. Which is why the front is made of windows.

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