Meanwhile subs like ComedyHeaven literally approve like one post a month for a whole year ๐
LimitedBrain
Oh I think it's far worse than that. Because you have to ask yourself: what is the fastest way to gain karma on reddit? And the answer is not by sharing an opinion.
The top up voted posts each month are likely going to be media of animals, some nsfw content, and news articles. All of which are posted by bots nonstop.
Because the truth is that karma already is money. People pay money for accounts with high karma. And then turn them into bot accounts or advertising accounts. So now those people will just be able to double dip.
In short: it's likely that reddit will just become a larger bot network if they do this. Karma systems don't lead to better posts. In fact, I'd almost prefer to keep the karma system on lemmy/kbin and just have it private.
Luckily for us Americans, the Europeans have their head on straight and can force companies to fix this by the end of the decade. So that'll be nice at least
I'm pretty sure there's like 3 companies that own around 80% of the US grocery market. There's a reason why avian flu drove the price of eggs up everywhere and its because one company owns the majority of egg production.
Well most of the comments here don't have an insight into this. The reason they don't re-release video games or old movies is because they don't want you enjoying old things. It's capitalism, but it's not arbitrary like the scarcity. Because it's not just video games, no company wants to re-release anything. Not a tractor, not a movie, not a dishwasher, nothing.
Why? Because then you don't buy the new thing with higher margins. Then you don't watch the new movie and they can't sell the new ads with the new character designs promoting it. Or you don't get locked in to their new cartridge system. Or subscription plan. Whatever. The song is different, the story is the same, new stuff make line go up faster. With tons of waste involved as well.
To be honest I think the phones are very equal which is actually why I want the opinions to color my decision because I'm finding it hard to decide. I bought the phone, but I'm not set on switching to it so I wanted to hear what people have to say before I get it.
Sometimes experiences are useful and I've heard experiences from people who use their phone very similar to me be happy with the switch. I'll have to report back.
But yeah I'm conscious of the frugal part. I even calculated out how much my android phone has cost me in depreciation and decided that the best way to think about it was in terms of that.
For example; my Note 10 plus cost about $1000 new and I've had it about 4 years, now it's worth $250. So my cost is roughly $200 to own the phone over that time. However, I can (and did) buy an iPhone 12 pro max for $600 and I expect it to follow a similar depreciation at $150 per year-ish.
So when people say that apple phones are more expensive, they're right, but there's an upfront investment. After that, owning a used iPhone is similar to owning a used android phone. Just a thought.
I don't see why this is cynical. They fell pretty flat on their face with windows 8 (no explanation necessary) and then made a Frankenstein job out of windows 10. I have zero idea what the plan is here.
You're not wrong about all of this. I wasn't trying to tribalize or start a fight (said so in my post even) because I know that people do that. However, my view has changed from when I last owned an iphone.
When I last owned an iphone, the fights made sense. I could see why people fought over platforms because they were very different and comparing and contrasting them at the time was pretty difficult to do directly. Like was it better to have back and forward button bars? Or were curved phone edges a good idea?
But nowadays my opinion is diffent. Phones do a lot of the same things. They're all very mature platforms for the most part. So when I ask my question I'm asking why, for most general use cases, anyone would want an android. And the response I'm getting back for the most part is: you don't.
This is coming from someone who desperately wants the competition. I ditched iphone about a decade ago when the S7 edge was a thing. I left behind all of the features iphones have for connecting with people for a platform that I believed had better tech, was more affordable, and had similar software support.
Nowadays I'm looking at the platforms and most of my reasons no longer make sense. Android phones are expensive. They aren't at apples level, but some of them are and none of them hold value. So why not wait two years and get a brand new android? Because the software updates aren't going to keep up. So for a higher initial investment, I can get a phone that will have decent resale value when I'm ready to upgrade and still get software updates.
All of this is to say that my ability to connect with friends over FaceTime and imessage aren't worth sticking it out on android to me. I don't see a lot of hope for the platform in the directions I want. I haven't seen the improvements I was hoping for. And so I'm jumping ship. Maybe I'll be back, maybe I'll hate iphone, we shall see!
Which is why reddit has been a target for gorilla marketing campaigns for a while now. I only trust review sites that I follow now
Link ๐คค๐คค๐คค๐คค
I've had similar experiences with android phones, seems like an older gen tech problem so I want to see if that's still an issue.
I'm going to call it whatever the devs call it because I want other people to find it and use it. Simple as that really