[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 14 points 2 months ago

Yes, to me, the nuance is what's important here.

"You're welcome" implies you did something good, and you know it. "I am good for doing this for you. You owe me!"

Whereas "no problem" implies it didn't cause you any trouble. "Doing this for you was not detrimental to my life. You owe me nothing."

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago

All the Star Trek shows were on free to air TV in Australia, but at 11pm before a school day, so still not visible to kids unless they had nerdy parents that let them stay up specifically to watch it.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 8 points 3 months ago

I'm from a country with ranked choice voting. We can vote for our preferred third-party candidate and it's not only fine but better. Even if they don't get in, they will get a portion of government money for help with campaigning in future elections, and our vote for the first viable candidate will be counted instead.

In the USA this is totally not the case. Your electoral system is designed to prevent third-party votes from meaning anything. As an anarchist who hates the politics of both neoliberal US major parties, I would still vote democrat, because a third-party vote is literally a wasted vote. It does not influence the 2 major parties in any way. They know there is no real threat from minor parties or independents unless they have massive overwhelming majority support.

Change the system through political action, community engagement, and spreading information. This vote will not change a thing unless it's for a major party, and only really if you're in a swing state. It's shit but true.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 13 points 3 months ago

Depends on where you're talking about. In Australia the right wing are using nuclear as a diversion to slow down the transition to renewables, so they can stay on gas and coal longer.

There's no nuclear power in Australia, and the time needed to create the industry, train or poach workers, create a plant and get it up and running makes no environmental or economical sense compared to what they are already set to achieve with wind, solar and storage.

If you've already got nuclear up and running, use it, but each new plant needs to be compared to the alternatives for that specific location, and the track record of the nuclear industry and government in that location.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 8 points 7 months ago

In Australia at least we usually use tartar sauce for the fish (shark) and 'chicken salt' with maybe some vinegar or soy sauce for the chips.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 11 points 9 months ago

You forgot budgie smugglers.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 12 points 9 months ago

Call it "Xubmarine 420" and tell him he invented it. I think he'd take that bait.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 10 points 9 months ago

When I started driving again recently after a 20 year hiatus I was getting upset when I made mistakes; running stop signs, forgetting indicators, etc.

But then I realised all I was doing was making it hard to concentrate, which could lead to more errors, maybe even a fatal crash.

I quickly adopted this "Oops that was illegal but it's fine" attitude. Notice my mistake, and move on.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 11 points 11 months ago

Thanks to the kind stranger(s) who finished off my "RICE LOVE" doodle (top right) while I was sleeping <3

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 10 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I think it's a default item everywhere except north America.

As part of reviewing a stay, Airbnb always asks if the place had a coffee maker. I've only ever ticked yes in the US, Canada, and Indonesia.

(edit: I should clarify, it asks if there was a coffee machine, but it DOESN'T ask if there was a kettle, showing the US-centric app design.)

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 10 points 11 months ago

For efficiency, yes, for dramatic effect, no.

[-] SuperApples@lemmy.world 9 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Valve has like five games, and the hundreds of thousands of other games on Steam are from other companies, and they've had 3rd-party games since 2005.

Activision/Blizzard didn't put their games on Steam so they can push their own store, it was to not make payments to a third party, and have high visibility of their own products (e.g. advertise CoD to Diablo players and vice versa). Of course, they miss out on the visibility of being on the largest game marketplace.

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SuperApples

joined 1 year ago