Big mood. Just had the third person tell me, "I'm just not feeling any romantic chemistry" in as many weeks.
Wondering if it's time to give up.
Big mood. Just had the third person tell me, "I'm just not feeling any romantic chemistry" in as many weeks.
Wondering if it's time to give up.
The URL made me think of this:
[...]anduril-unveils-barracudam[...]
More like Barracu-DAMN, am I right?
This is undeniably hilarious, but if you've ever seen actual dissection photos or videos of surgery, you kinda recognize that good anatomical drawings required a lot of mental effort to create.
Imagine making a completely accurate diagram of everything in a car's engine bay, either while the engine is running and it's doing 70mph down the highway, or after it's had a head-on collision at the same speed.
We've seen plenty of evidence that the current inflation is almost entirely driven by companies price gouging consumers.
And actually, the fact that the price hasn't increased is pretty obvious evidence of this.
Do you think, for one second, Apple would accept any appreciable hit to its profit margin if their costs had inflated 1:1 with consumer prices? Especially when they have a perfect excuse to blame a price increase on?
The phone may cost them a little more to make than last year, but I doubt it's that much.
There's tons of elasticity built into the pricing already so that carriers can offer discounts.
The point is kind of moot because the phone definitely comes with the cable: https://www.apple.com/iphone-16/specs/
The article is actually about the new AirPods. I was going entirely off the information in the comment I was replying to.
The thing is, the iPhone 14, 15 and 16 all have the same launch price: $799 US
Adjusted for inflation, the 14 and 15 may have cost more, but Apple is almost certainly making that money back somewhere else. Like, say, making people pay for accessories that used to be included?
And at the end of the day, the prices consumers pay for end products don't follow the exact same curve as the prices megacorporations pay for materials and labor. We've seen plenty of evidence that the current inflation is almost entirely driven by companies price gouging consumers. So it's not really reasonable to assume that Apple's costs have gone up 1:1 with consumer prices anyway.
But here's the question: does it cost Apple $20 to make a cable? I seriously doubt it. It probably costs them closer to 20 cents per cable. So in reality, they now make approximately $20 more from every sale than they did before.
Sure, not everyone is buying a cable with every phone. But cables get lost, they wear out, they get stolen by your kids to charge their iPhones because they broke theirs, they get chewed up by pets, etc.
And you can bet your ass that, just like any other high-margin item, the people in the Apple store are gonna be incentivized like hell to get every customer to buy a cable with their phone whether they really need it or not:
Do you have a charging cable?
Is it an Apple cable?
Are you sure you have one that's USB-C and supports USB Power Delivery?
And it's not worn out?
You say your dog chewed on it a little but it's mostly intact and still works?
Well, I'd recommend getting a new one anyway.
Yeah you can get your own if you want but it's best if you get an Apple cable.
OK great, that comes out to $820 total. And do you want to insure your phone for $5 a month?
It's fine if they reduce the price accordingly.
If it's still the same price after they take the cable out, it was never about reducing waste to begin with.
Knowing Apple, that wouldn't surprise me in the slightest, which is why I never have and never will own any of their products.
I feel like you either fear and/or despise generative AI, or you think it's the best thing since sliced bread.
There seems to be very little in-between.
Car manufacturers have brilliantly managed to convince me never to buy a car made after ~2015.
Your opinion is posited as an absolute: "This is useless"
That's not even correct. I said "not all that useful" and then "next to useless". Never "absolutely useless".
The whole point of this feature is to provide something built into Steam that works without a whole bunch of fiddling like other recording software. It currently fails at that on Linux because the implementation of it is half-assed. That is my position. End of conversation.
I see this as a substitute for Shadowplay, which records your microphone if you enable it, which I previously used on Windows to record gameplay clips, but it doesn't exist on Linux.
Steam Game Recording can record your microphone on Windows, but they haven't bothered to make it work on Linux for whatever reason.
As currently implemented on Linux, it captures all system audio and cannot be configured to do anything otherwise, so if you're talking with friends on TeamSpeak, it'll only capture half of the fucking conversation. Making it next to useless.
I'm getting really annoyed that people are going out of their way to invalidate my opinion here.
Yeah, but I'm fucking exhausted and tired of being disappointed.