[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 13 points 1 year ago

So cute. You can make friends with wild skunks, actually, I've been doing this since age 7. They love peanuts. If you have food to give to them, they will not spray you, and you can pet them in your back yard! They're so cute and fun to interact with, and they don't even have to be domesticated.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago

It looks like a lot of mistakes were made in your case. I saw your posts asking about dialogue and such. I'm surprised no one has reached out to you because, speaking for myself, when I remove something and give an explanation in the modlog and I'm asked more questions by message, I always reply and explain myself. I'm sure someone will interact with you if you send an admin a message. I looked at the log and it looks like a script or other automated action is to blame. The admin actually caught the issue and tried to restore your posts. It also looks like it was a "suspected spam" type of deletion that was corrected. I understand your irritation. I wouldn't want to be in your situation because you took lots of time to add content to a community you care about. However, it looks like one of those things we call an "honest mistake" that somebody on the admin team tried to take back. I haven't seen a case like this, it's very eye-catching to me, because it's so obviously a mistake. To help make you feel better, I'll tell you a little story. 2 years ago I spent about 2000 bucks on a Lenovo Legion 5 gaming laptop. I took it to a computer repair guy to clean the dust out of it on the inside and replace the thermal paste on the CPU and GPU. He used a forced air compressor to clean the fans and didn't see that a loose wire on his work table was inadvertently in contact with one of the cooling fans. Snap! Broke the fan. He apologized personally to me (like, you know, face to face) and promised me he would replace the component he broke free of charge, plus do the whole entire job in front of me so I could see what he was doing. He fulfilled his promise. I must admit, it was quite boring to sit through watching him take out all the screws, etc. But he kept his word and did the right thing. The people that run lemmy world seem to me to be a lot more honest than dishonest and also very willing to admit they screwed up if they screwed up, just like my computer repair guy. I'm very certain that if you pm an admin the very admin responsible for the error will write to you personally. You were just unlucky. Somebody wrote a bad script or was tired and wasn't thinking clearly. I think it says a lot about how someone attempted to restore your posts. Also, if the images attached to them can't be recovered, is it too much work on your part to delete the empty restored posts and just make new posts with the images? Maybe in between posts, you can count to ten so it doesn't look like spam or something? I think that would help make your community look nicer and more appealing to subscribers who like comic book art.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago

What is a community? Recommended reading: Imagined Communities by Benedict Anderson.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 40 points 1 year ago

I invented a machine that converts masking tape you can buy at the dollar store into backup tapes. I rewrote Bacula to write the backup AND print pretty flowers on the masking tape. Totally free and open-source. Download it from a rotary phone.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 77 points 1 year ago

It's like, when you install arch, you just feel like not bothering with installing the gui stuff, because you're so above pointing and clicking on things. If only they'd make a command line version of Metro Exodus. Metro Exodus on the command line would be so much more powerful. It's so lame with graphics. Don't get me started on editing my photos of the kids and fam. Just load that pic up on the command line as raw data. I'll just eliminate the red eye reading the machine code and editing it. GUIs are for weaklings. Just install arch without X or gnome or any of that stuff. Don't even get me started on the KDE wussies. Oh yeah, you want things to look all pretty on your screen to click on. Computers aren't pretty. They take commands. All you need are fingers and a keyboard. You can play tetris on the terminal, you know. No need for graphics. The linux devs just added graphics and a GUI for wussy users. Even invented that penguin thing to make it pretty and dumbed down.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

It's more like after they bought the new clothes. Like, your friend bought new clothes and wants to show you what they bought. It could be a friend, a brother, a sister, a cousin, an aunt, anybody. While shopping for clothes, before they buy the clothes, is the right time to criticize. It's perfectly acceptable, and desired, to be out shopping and trying on clothes before buying them, to say whatever you like. "That makes your ass look huge, don't buy that!" is desired, not discouraged. Never trust the salesperson. The employee of the store is going to tell you it all looks good so you buy it, even if it looks bad. They even try to sell you more crap, saying things go together when they don't. I'm talking about after they bought the clothes and they're showing you what they bought because you're their friend or relative or whatever.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 57 points 1 year ago

Just misunderstanding social cues. Where I live (Spain), there's a script you're supposed to follow for certain things and newcomers, understandably, don't understand the script. One famous example is buying new clothes. They all look great on. The idea here is that the poor person spent their hard-earned money on the new clothes. Damned right they look great on! Another would be birthdays celebrated in public venues. Perhaps someone you know is celebrating their birthday in a public venue and you had no idea they were celebrating their birthday on that day. You walk up to them and wish them a happy birthday, BUT you were not invited to this celebration. Since you weren't invited you did not come prepared with a present for the birthday person. The safe thing to do is to ignore, socialize with the people you came with, and make like that person isn't even there until they approach YOU. When and if they approach you, you make pretend you're all distracted and you have to be like, "Ahhh! I didn't see you! What's up?" The reason: that person is buying all the invitees the drinks and food. In exchange, the invitees have brought presents. It's a very nuanced and weird situation all of us have encountered. We err on the fear of not having brought a present because we had no idea because we were not invited.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 24 points 1 year ago

Imagine submitting a CV to a potential employer with a mugshot. Unless you're looking for a job with a criminal organization or trying to be US president it won't fly.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 27 points 1 year ago

I can say why I'm not exactly fond of my dentist: I'm missing a molar I don't need, my dentist keeps on trying to get me to spend over a thousand euros on an implant he can put in. Every visit he tries to sell me this useless implant. Every visit I say, "no thank you." This has been going on for five years. It gets old. Other than that, he's great at his job so I don't know. I don't consider him to be of the "bad rep" variety. A failed salesperson? Perhaps.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago

I noticed that the "Rich Kids" app for photo sharing (aka Instagram for the wealthy) is only in English and Russian, so I guess that one is mostly for Russia's oligarchy? It makes me wonder if most of it is for the Russian oligarchy for the most part. I can't see filthy rich people from the USA or Europe using these things. A lot of them are actually on Instagram and Tinder like "regular" people use.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world to c/games@lemmy.world

I'm asking because it seems to me that there are people that write guides to games that are high score addicts. For example, if you look up a guide to an RPG or even an Action RPG game on there, the author of the guide wants to help you. The same thing goes for people writing guides for platform-type games. However, if you're like me, and play all kinds of games, from rolling dice to adventure RPG to platforming games, and if you have read a few guides from there, you perhaps have noticed something I've noticed that irritates me. Score chasing types of game guides are sometimes incomplete and refer to tropes like, "if you're feeling tired, take a break and eat a salad" types of things. I love arcade style games and feel like these types of guides which say such things are absolutely dumb. There are also guides to score-chasing games that leave out important information or do not elaborate on things, or even seem a bit subjective when it comes down to difficulty level (score chasers often have some type of level of ease, starting from "easy" moving into "normal" and then to "hardcore.") Recently, I was bored and decided to peruse some guides to "score chasers" I frequently play to see what there was, and I was appalled. Guides that leave out important info. Guides that make comments on modes of play (such as hardcore) that are not helpful, etc. I think this also relates to Steam's list of "curators." They also need a rating system independent of awards and all that other stuff. I don't know what everyone else thinks about this, but sometimes, especially when it comes to games labelled "score chaser" and other games that have a lot of chance in tandem with skill, that the authors of the guides are sometimes not trustworthy because they leave out details that could get you a higher score (I know myself, because I get high scores lol). It's like they're paranoid about getting their high scores beaten or something (I have done that, without having read their guide). Sorry if you don't feel like reading this, but I think it's a problem. Guides like these discourage people who are trying to learn how to play a game and it seems like the guide is written in such a way as to discourage people from playing the game because they give the wrong idea about the game on purpose, because they don't want their high score beaten by someone that read the guide.

TLDR; some writers of guides for arcade and score chaser types of games do so out of paranoid interests in their own high scores and should be vetted on Steam because they either provide terse information about particular items on purpose or give lame, generic advice such as wear comfortable clothing and eat a salad.

[-] FinalBoy1975@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago

This article would be more useful to me (I'm saying to me, not in general, perhaps it's useful for many and I'm strange) if it had suggestions for which retro handhelds are really good. I don't particularly enjoy watching YouTube reviews of products. I don't particularly enjoy watching gamers on YouTube, either. I'd rather read something quickly. Do you happen to have a good article on decent handhelds? I've been saving up for a Steam Deck, but if there are any interesting retro handhelds out there, I'd check them out (but no YouTube, please).

3

Decided to open my Amiga emulator and play one of my favorites from my teenage years. If you've never played this game, you'll be surprised when you do. 4 tables. It feels surprisingly realistic. The ball moves like on a real pinball table. The music is very late 80s early 90s, of course!

1

Satanic Panic in 2023: 27 years later playing "Devil's Crush" and still so far away from 1 billion points. Maybe the 700 Billion Club will come back from the dead and help me.

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FinalBoy1975

joined 1 year ago