[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 days ago

I'm a road bike guy, so that's probably my ignorance showing. I've sat out the recent evolution in MTB stuff.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 days ago

Ok, that makes sense.

I still don't see why they (Mozilla) felt the feature was needed, since if you're installing an addon to manage tabs, that's all on you, the user.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 days ago

Trek is particularly bad about this: they now sell a "platform" instead of a bike. This makes it comparably hard to get replacements for a Domane or CheckPoint because certain parts are sized for that bike and that bike only.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 131 points 1 month ago

Tell me again how both sides are the same?

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 216 points 2 months ago

Because Google was so focused and strategic before the pandemic rollseyes.

The issue is Google’s broken governance and incentive system, which gives product owners and executives incentives for new products and actively disincentivizes maintaining and improving existing products...and that was a thing from well before the pandemic hit.

It's why Google launched three pay systems and had five messaging systems at the same time.

And, finally, this is all because of the strategy set by senior leaders.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 183 points 5 months ago

The market has solved it.

You just don't realize what the market has solved for. It didn't solve the problem of expensive healthcare, it solved the problem of how to maximize profits for the wealthy.

That's what people don't understand about "the market". What you think it's doing isn't what it's actually doing.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 121 points 6 months ago

What's depressingly unsurprising about those stats is that the shittier the food, the lower the GP%.

Oh sorry, you want real cheese and not extruded plastic masquerading as a dairy-like substance? Better pay more. Want something more sustainable, like oat milk? 55% markup.

And people wonder why the poor are less healthy. Fuck these fucking ghouls.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 145 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

To be honest, the people who actually run LL Bean have written open letters distancing them and the company from Linda and her views.

They are (were) stuck with her earning dividends, but she didn't have actual support from or much influence on the company.

She mostly just took dividends, hocked her lobster rolls and created a PR problem for the company.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 175 points 7 months ago

When fucking Fortune magazine is calling out late-stage capitalism, you know we're in trouble.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 240 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago)

How about we go back to the one where we applied a marginal tax rate of 90% to the rich?

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 206 points 8 months ago

This stuff should ring alarm bells for anyone who studied history, because these are 1920s/1930s Germany-style micro movements.

Naziism didn't start with the Final Solution. It didn't start with work camps. It didn't even start with the beer Hall putsch. It started with things like this.

[-] psvrh@lemmy.ca 152 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

So now that microplastics are the new hotness, industry is going to run the same plays they did when climate change became critical: blaming and shaming us for their mistakes, and trying to sell us more stuff to work around the problem they created.

I'd love a new washer and dryer, but I live in an apartment and don't get a choice and I can't buy a house because housing is now an investment vehicle. I'd love to hang out my clothes to dry, but because we've gutted healthcare, social services and housing, they get stolen by homeless and/or addicts. I'd love to not have to wash clothes as often, but I have to go into the office and look "presentable" because we can't have commercial real estate lose value by having people work from home.

How about we stop shaming people and bust the proverbial balls of capitalism instead?

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psvrh

joined 1 year ago