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2 yr. ago

  • I read your comment 3 full times and I still don't understand how anything explains why they wished for a white Christmas.

    Edit: after thinking about this more, this reads like one of those stories that gets passed around without much evidence. It doesn't really make much sense when compared to the lyrics of the song. 3 weeks is not long enough to establish "just like the ones i used to know", and if they were jewish and wanted to write a song about remembering their late nights infant child....why be confusing and reference a holiday you don't even celebrate?

    Here is a sample lyric: "I'm dreaming of a white Christmas
    \ With every Christmas card I write
    \ May your days be merry and bright
    \ And may all your Christmases be white"

    This is a regular Christmas song. If anything, it's simply a coincidence his child died on christmas, and had very little to do with the creation of the song in any way, but gets passed around as for some reason probably just cuz infant death is dramatic. It might sound harsh in 2024, but 100 years ago losing a child at 3 weeks was sadly much more common and likely not as traumatic as we consider it today.

    Edit2: i looked it up on Wikipedia:

    "Accounts vary as to when and where Berlin wrote the song.[7] One story is that he wrote it in 1940, in warm La Quinta, California, while staying at the La Quinta Hotel, a frequent Hollywood retreat also favored by writer-director-producer Frank Capra, although the Arizona Biltmore also claims the song was written there.[8] He often stayed up all night writing. One day he told his secretary, "I want you to take down a song I wrote over the weekend. Not only is it the best song I ever wrote, it's the best song anybody ever wrote."[9]"

    The Wikipedia states they had a son who died in infancy, but makes no claims anywhere about it being on Christmas day so who knows about that even.

  • If i know China, it's the same as Bluetooth but with code tweaked enough to be distinct, while also funneling data into shady servers.

  • Wait, we had networking like that in the 70s? I've never heard that, do you have any other specific information I can look up? A computer at a school talking to another school remotely to use its processing power in the 70s sounds like alternate reality. That's literally just the internet. What were they pushing the data over? Surely not phone lines?

  • I loved irc 20 years ago....i have no clue how to get back into it. How do you even find a cool server in 2024??

  • Chaotic good is the best one out of any of them and I've been shouting it for 15 years

  • Isn't soda stream also very pro trump?

  • Same. I beat that entire game and put at least 40 hours into it I'm sure, and I couldn't tell you a single plot point. It's been a few years for sure, but I haven't played Mass effect in like a decade and I could tell you the entire story from beginning to end.

  • My best guess: The thought processes required to ponder the possibility of a simulation are too important to the goal of the simulation itself to disable.

  • I cooked at a bar for a year in college after i served, to this day i check for tip jars put out for cooks because you all deserve the real money. Only see them once in a while though, sadly

  • You think the people who didn't even realize that Biden wasn't running are adamantly keeping tabs on the status of UBI? Because even if it was passed in a legislative miracle, Republicans would take credit, and they would believe them. I don't agree that this would sway the "wait, did biden drop out? What's black tea?" voters.

  • It was a pretty bad visit. I ordered ranch with my fries, and my patty melt with only American cuz i don't know why you'd want swiss on a patty melt. They brought me the melt with swiss, and I got blue cheese for my fries. And didn't get a water until i was finished with my melt.

    Tipped her 10$ cuz she was overworked and I used to be a server. Yay tip culture.

  • I struggle to think of what to call it and how to describe it, too. But it really is like a consistent quality. Some sort of reasoning blindness. It's like listening to someone who is colorblind but doesn't know critique a painting.

  • So if the party did more, people wouldn't be googling "is the current president running for president?" the day before election? I don't really see how the party trying harder in the right way would fix people's innate ignorance.

    The DNC deserves a ton of blame, but 2024 has taught me there is no democracy without an educated population, and ours is not educated.

  • I just got back from drowning my sorrows into a patty melt at a local bar I frequent. I normally go at night, so the daytime servers were new to me. Got a 40ish year-old lady server who was overworked because everywhere is understaffed now. I asked for some tea because I hadn't had caffeine yet, and she looks at me puzzled and says, "like hot tea?" And I say "Yes! Black please, but green is ok too if you don't have it." And she looked at me, still confused, and said, "Well i don't know what that is, but we have regular hot tea I can bring you with some hot water." After she left to put in my order, I couldn't stop thinking about this exchange.

    This article gives me the same exact feeling. Whatever is happening that allows adult women SERVERS to be unfamiliar with one of the most popular drinks on the planet. Whatever allowed it so so many people didn't even realize Biden had dropped out...is the reason we lost to trump. It's the reason Democrat weren't able to break through on any issue. We were either talking to brick walls, or black holes. It's no ones fault but that servers that she was unaware of black tea. You can't force people to be intellectually curious or skeptical or even open minded. And these same people get to vote. And that's why we can't have nice things.

  • I didn't like it, myself. I played through to the end and found it incredibly tedious for what you got out of the story, which was basically just a tale about a macguffin in the ocean with sea monsters. The biggest complaint was how painful they made navigating the memory scenes. Every time you want to do anything, you first gotta backtrack all over the ship and you gotta wait through these intro and outro cutscenes and music, and it got old very fast for me. I also got tired of the entire gimmick about 25% in, as there is no variation to the puzzles in the game, they are all set up the same—try to identify people based on surroundings and descriptions, 60+ times. The art direction was really impressive at first, but quickly became dull to me around the time the gimmick started the wear thin.

    Tl;dr: it's admittedly a very creative take on a mystery game, but unfortunately playing through to the end is tedious and lacks needed QoL features.