Zardozer

joined 1 year ago
[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Lots of iPhones cost way less than $1k, and there’s plenty of Android flagships that cost over $1k, and they’re all decent phones. Sure, go ahead and judge people for spending money on a device they use every day.

And what I said about the ‘default’ phone is true, and that’s for normal middle class families. Far from the elite. I’m just reporting the facts, it’s maybe people have a different frame of reference depending on where they live.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world -4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Do you live in the US? Maybe not, but iPhones have something like a 50% market share here, and in some regional cases a lot higher. For example, in southern California where I live, iPhones are easily in the majority of people's hands. The point is that this feeling is probably more a 'your problem' issue, and it's hard to make a case that people use these phones as a way to feel exclusive if the market share is so high. There may be some issues of exclusion amongst teenagers etc., but teenagers are going to teenager. I'm just talking about the US though. In some emerging markets there may be a case made for the iPhone to be seen as 'luxury,' but this hasn't been the case in the US for a while. iPhones are seen as an ordinary, almost default phone.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

I mean, China’s a pretty big country.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Ok surely it's not VRAM. But my cpu is a 12700k, and while it's not the fastest anymore, you would think it's enough for this game. It's using some fairly standard DDR4 ram, though. Not the fastest nor the slowest. I do wonder if memory bandwidth speed has anything to do with it, but it's all speculation.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I play this primarily on my M1 Max mbp, even though I also sometimes play on my desktop. I have the same issue with a ps4 controller, so I connect it.

What’s interesting to note is that I have fewer hitches on the mbp than on my desktop with a 3080 10gb, and I’m not sure what’s the reason for that. My theory is either vram limits or the mbp memory bus hides a lot of that with its speed.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I'm playing online. I haven't tried offline yet, but I'll test when I get the chance and report back. Seems really shoddy that it would run like that online when D4 is fine.

4
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Zardozer@lemmy.world to c/diablo@lemmy.world
 

Since D4 servers are going down for maintenance, I took the time to hop onto D2R cause I recently got it on sale lol.

It runs smoothly except for some annoying micro-stuttering that happens fairly frequently. I tried limiting it to 60 fps, 58, etc., and it made no difference. What gives? I'm running on a 12700k 32GB RAM/3080 10GB, and it BETTER not be VRAM issues (I already have to run D4 with high texture settings to keep it from doing momentary stutters).

So is D2R really just terribly optimized or what? The game has been out for a while now. I searched this problem and no one seemed to have a definitive solution. Crazy to me that D4 runs better.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

It doesn't look like Ray Davies to me. Very interesting show, it's kind of like Black Mirror if it was done in a more experimental pseudo-documentary format. It's about the "Video Age" lol.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Works great at 60fps on my M1 Max mbp, but a) you really have to use it on the Sonoma beta for the least problems. I made a Sonoma beta install on a separate SSD to not mess up my current install. And b) updates to Battle.net can break it, so you have to reinstall Battle.net if that's the case. Not a huge deal but that means going to terminal and inputting commands, etc. Not ideal. There are other programs that are supposed to 'smooth' out the install process, like Whiskey, but I haven't tried them.

[–] Zardozer@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I spend about 90% of my time in macOS because it's what I use for work, but like you I have a long history with PCs and still build and maintain them mostly for gaming and testing. Macs are overall a more polished and integrated experience, and it's the attention to detail I like the most (not that they're perfect of course).

Some examples upon many... Windows 11, which I use on my main gaming PC, STILL doesn't have a consistent dark mode. Basic windows like disk operation progress are white still. You still have to dig into control panel at times for certain things, even though they continue to add more things to settings. You still have to deal with drive letters. Installs now REQUIRE an MS account, even though the workaround still works. Overall it works fine, but there are a ton of things that bug me.

As for talking with people, well living in SoCal it's not a big deal because the overall market share for Macs is pretty high regionally. So everyone is familiar with them, and if I had to guess, 80% of the people I interact with are Mac users even though most also use PCs for certain things.