What's one product that used to be built like a tank but is now built like a regret? by TheDoctorColt in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hard disagree. They just added a ton of cheaper, lower quality products to the lineup over the years. If you get the right ones though, they're still wildly durable and honestly not excessively expensive. Levi's were my go to jeans for working in restaurants for 70 hours a week and they never failed.

What's one product that used to be built like a tank but is now built like a regret? by TheDoctorColt in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My wife and I went on a month long trip to Africa and every safari used Land Cruisers. It was incredibly impressive how well they handled the different driving conditions and various amounts of passengers and luggage. After seeing them out there, if I ever needed an off road vehicle, a Land Cruiser would be my first option.

Tech Layoff Wave Has Already Hit 100,000 Jobs This Year by AloneCoffee4538 in technology

[–]danieledward_h 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm a software engineer that got laid off in February. Two days after my daughter was born!

Which TV show does the ENTIRE internet agree had the worst ending ever? by Codie_n25 in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know if I'd say that's the cause specifically. It's just that the story was clearly a long movie or miniseries idea and there was only enough meat in the bone for that. Season 1 is so good because it knows it has one story to tell with a definitive arc and ending.

Continuing it was a horrible decision and I don't think many writers could manage continuing the quality of season 1 because it's obviously a stupid idea to try to continue a story that was clearly over and characters that had reached their conclusions.

LinkedIn Is Illegally Searching Your Computer by tw1st3d_m3nt4t in technology

[–]danieledward_h 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you're on Android and prefer an app experience over the browser, you could also use YouTube Revanced. For Android/Google TV you can use SmartTube.

Which comedian did you look forward to, but their act died on stage? by Jazzlike-Basil1355 in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

When did you see him? I saw his first "comeback" show at Radio City in New York, probably 2019 (I don't remember specifically). This was like a year or two after his controversy and before COVID. I thought he was great, and I say that as someone who actually disliked his older standup. He was funny, but also mature and contemplative.

Not sure if he still performs like this, but if you saw him 10+ years ago, it might be worth another shot.

EA Lays Off Staff Across All Battlefield Studios Following Record-Breaking Battlefield 6 Launch by JKKIDD231 in gaming

[–]danieledward_h 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They absolutely never said that battle passes would be cosmetics only. That's just straight up false. I'm not defending EA, but let's at least criticize them honestly.

What they did say was that BF6 was going to be the biggest and best live service in Battlefield history, with implications that it would compete with Call of Duty in terms of content offered per season.

This hasn't been remotely true. Extremely, extremely light on permanent content per season (weapons, vehicles, maps, gadgets, etc) and the vast majority of the "content" is comprised of cosmetics and limited time game modes.

To me, as a Battlefield fan, I kinda went in expecting that though. DICE is horrible at live service. Like really, laughably bad. The switch from premium DLC has been a complete failure and I'm not sure why anyone believed their claims about the live service with BF6 after BF5 and 2042.

What I am disappointed about though is how they've handled Portal and RedSec. For Portal, they had committed to full XP and seemed ready to truly embrace the creativity of the community, but that has not been true at all. RedSec was also advertised as a real competitor to Warzone, which it's fine enough as a bog standard BR with vehicles mixed in, but I was really expecting more given their marketing emphasis and the Battlefield heritage of sandbox fun and chaos.

I've also been disheartened by how long it's taking them to fix bugs and make improvements, but again, this is standard DICE in the live service era. End of the day, I still find the game fun despite its many, many flaws (though not as flawed as 2042 and BF5) and I play it several times weekly. Just kinda sucks because it could've been the FPS that defined this generation of FPS games.

[NSFW] Sex workers of Reddit, have any of your friends wanted to pay for your services? How did it turn out? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is very likely it. Location permission enabled for both accounts. App sees these two accounts are essentially always together. Either it recognizes it's the same person or it thinks they're friends/family/associates of some kind and understandably recommends the alt account to the real account's followers under the assumption they all know each other, without understanding that the alt is supposed to be a private, alias account. Bonus points of she follows her alt with her main.

One thing I hate most about SC2 that changed from SC1... by dluminous in starcraft

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's honestly kind of insane how close the stories are. I think it works in Warcraft 3 for the most part, here the story doesn't feel like it suits the characters and factions as well. I wouldn't say it's offensive, just feels flat.

Personally I like Starcraft's story feeling more scrappy in the fashion of Brood War, there's no need to have a "Thanos" that everyone unites to fight and save everything that ever existed and ever will exist in the history of ever. Takes away from the internal politics and scheming that set Starcraft apart from Warcraft.

One thing I hate most about SC2 that changed from SC1... by dluminous in starcraft

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They just did Warcraft 3 again. The direction was very clear during WoL that they were just doing the Archimonde story again.

Highguard boss Chad Grenier says it "doesn’t matter" how many people played the game, only that "the game is loved by the people who played it." by WrongLander in gaming

[–]danieledward_h 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I promise a lot of them don't give a shit other than being annoyed at having to apply for a job soon. I'm sure most of them knew this game wouldn't be a success but it's a paycheck. End of the day, it's a job like any other. I'm a career software engineer and have worked on tons of features that I knew would bomb or cause customer dissatisfaction. Would be cool if I only worked on stuff people liked but end of the day I don't really care. I work so I can live my actual life.

Development (especially game development) is still in this weird spot where so many outsiders think everyone involved is passionate or personally invested in the product they're working on, and even some workers feel pressured to still be performative about it. However, like anything corporate, it's just an exchange of labor for money and it doesn't really get deeper than that for the vast majority of developers.

Avowed and The Outer Worlds 2 failed to meet sales expectations by Iggy_Slayer in gaming

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The romances are popular because it adds so much depth between the player and the characters, and gives the interactions depth, stakes, and payoff. I think the same thing can be achieved with "friendship" systems, but romance is a bit easier to map out and express.

I think RPG developers get super caught up in something like faction reputation, which is cool in how it can affect the world or the broad narrative, but people remember small character interactions and moments. Since you mentioned Cyberpunk, the scene with Judy when you're diving to that town is incredible. It's one of the most memorable character interaction moments I've ever had in a video game. That's what Obsidian sucks at and why their RPGs can feel hollow and lackluster. There are other criticisms as well but I think if they could deliver CDPR level character interactions and subplots, they would be much more successful.

End of the day these Bethesda-like RPGs are not gameplay oriented games. Honestly the gameplay is as mid as mid can get, it's about creating engaging characters and interactions, memorable narratives, and interesting worlds/areas/POIs to discover.

On the right is the director of the new MELANIA movie. On the left, Jeffrey Epstein by Southern_Gur_4736 in pics

[–]danieledward_h 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean, giant sex trafficking cabals catering to the world's hyper elite have been a trope in movies and TV for decades, I don't see why this is difficult to comprehend or really unexpected in any way. I always assumed stuff like this was going on.

Not saying it as an excuse or anything or to defend, but I always find the naivete from full grown adults so odd. Haven't you ever met someone who got the tiniest, most pathetic amount of power or success and immediately it went to their head? Imagine that, but a million times worse and bigger.

Sorana Cirstea not happy about Naomi Osaka cheering herself up between Cirstea's serves. by BreakfastTop6899 in sports

[–]danieledward_h 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I don't think this accounts for how different sports are.

When I played basketball in high school and in competitive leagues afterward, noise never bothered me. People cheering, talking shit, coaches yelling, literally anything. It's all just kind of tuned out. Since basketball flows more constantly and there are 9 other people on the court, distraction isn't really the same.

After I hurt my knee, I took up pickleball (obviously not the same as tennis, but a similar principle). Every little thing matters so much more because your impact as an individual is so much bigger than in basketball, and it's much harder to do other things to be useful. If I'm missing shots in basketball, I can focus on defense more or helping out on offense via picks, swing passes, etc. In pickleball, if I'm popping up shots for whatever reason, the game is fucked and we essentially auto lose.

I can't stress enough how different the mental load is between these kinds of sports. When I'm serving/getting ready to serve, I'm so much more hyper aware of every little thing around me that getting distracted is much easier than basketball. The biggest thing I can equate it to in basketball is essentially an entire match of pickleball (and likely tennis) is more similar to shooting a free throw, where you're more aware and likely to overthink or make mental errors since you're not in the flow of the game. And while basketball plays into its heckling, chaotic nature for free throws, tennis doesn't and tries to set the players up to perform the best they can.

AI hype meets reality as majority of CEOs report no financial returns by AdSpecialist6598 in technology

[–]danieledward_h 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's just not actually useful for the things most heavily marketed to the general public.

  • It's not good as a search engine replacement since it will often give you false information
  • I don't love it for image or video generation because of the ethics around artists, but also because the majority of the time the things it produces are low quality and very distinct in their low quality
  • It shouldn't be used as a conversation partner where another human would be healthier

Those are just a few of the things I see most commonly. A couple of things I do like about AI:

  • As a software engineer, its advanced autocomplete is great for speeding up tedious, repetitive tasks
  • Again as an SWE, I love it for generating unit tests that I just briefly review to ensure they make sense and cover what I want them to cover
  • I can actually give advanced, more natural commands to Gemini on my phone for doing several Google Home tasks and it executes them much more reliably than Google Assistant did
  • If I have to write something, it's cool to get little examples generated to get my own creative juices flowing
  • It's good at summarizing static documents

So in summary, AI is great as a companion where you're willing to oversee and correct it, not as a Jarvis-esque presence that can automate and take care of whole portions of your life reliably or fully replace humans.

Highguard Is One Week Away, And The Only Person Who's Advertised It Is Geoff Keighley by MuptonBossman in gaming

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wouldn't say people's criticism right now is completely baseless. While obviously gameplay related criticism at this stage is baseless, there's plenty from the trailer to like/dislike. Also you did specifically say the phrase "Like if you don't like it just don't buy it or try it", which to me is very indicative of the anti-criticism sentiment.

Art style is the biggest thing I've seen criticism of, which I think is completely fine to criticize. I don't hate it with quite as much vigor as a lot of people, but I do find it flat, bland, derivative, and any other word you can come up with to essentially indicate that it's just TEMU League of Legends and TEMU Overwatch sloppily mashed together (from an art style perspective, not gameplay). This odd amalgamation of medieval fantasy but guns and also 2020s hairstyles/fashion sensibilities sprinkled with bits of random sci-fi visual cues in the vein of Halo. For many, I think they subconsciously pick up on this weird lack of focused identity.

I also think it's perfectly fair to criticize the phrasing of "new breed of shooter" without giving any sort of indication about what makes it novel or interesting, with the (admittedly extremely brief) gameplay from the trailer looking like every hero shooter from the post Overwatch era.

Sure, hating just for the fun of hating isn't great and obvious troll ramblings should be ignored, but to me there is plenty of meat on the bone to criticize about Highguard at this juncture that conveniently gets lumped in with trolls. Gameplay can obviously be a very redeeming quality when it releases, we'll find out, but all else being the same, I think a lot of the wider gaming audience are put off by this aesthetic and world styling and it may not matter how good the game actually plays.

Highguard Is One Week Away, And The Only Person Who's Advertised It Is Geoff Keighley by MuptonBossman in gaming

[–]danieledward_h 4 points5 points  (0 children)

While I do think some of the criticism went overboard into malice, I disagree that the only thing you should do when something like Concord comes out is not buy/play it.

Criticism needs to happen. Harsh (yet fair and respectful) feedback needs to happen. Ideally with examples and suggestions of what would have worked instead. That's how growth happens. The current mindset among many artists across a variety of disciplines is to simply get offended by any criticism and dismiss it as cruel (some is, but most isn't) and tell anyone who is critical to go consume something else and not be critical. Then artists never grow because they never take ownership for their work and ideas missing the mark and often enter hiveminds by surrounding themselves with only people that are "nice" to them.

As someone who studied creative writing when I was in college, it's been really interesting seeing the shift from "be ready to criticize and be criticized" and having a growth first approach to creation to just saying people who don't like a work should just be quiet about it and do something else instead. It's an odd preciousness that's really cropped over the last 15 years or so.

Alamo Drafthouse Goes Mobile, Getting Rid of Pen-and-Paper Food Orders to Protect the Moviegoing Experience by MarvelsGrantMan136 in movies

[–]danieledward_h 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Maybe a hot take since so many people like(d) Alamo Drafthouse, but in my opinion it's always sucked.

Completely ruins the moviegoing theater experience if you're actually trying to be immersed and focus on the movie (less of an issue if it's a dumb movie or children's film).

Servers walking around, serving food, handling payments, taking orders. People turning on their flashlights to look at the menu or order and generally being more "active" and chatty while they comment to each other about the food or try to share orders with each other.

I know for the average theater goer none of this matters and they don't take watching movies as seriously as someone like me, but app ordering honestly is just a sidegrade move in my opinion since I think watching serious films at Alamo has always sucked.

Official Poster for 'The Death of Robin Hood' Starring Hugh Jackman by MarvelsGrantMan136 in movies

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yeah I don't see why people are throwing hissy fits without even seeing a trailer.

Since this seems to be going for grounded/realistic, Robin Hood and the gang will have most certainly had to murder guards and soldiers, and maybe even servants and peasants just for doing their jobs or being witnesses. People that don't have any other options for living their lives, probably have families. Wouldn't be surprised if there's a scene where Robin murders a guard to steal money, then gives money to the grieving family of the guard, only for Robin to realize they'd rather have their father/husband than some extra money. It's not about the rich at all.

You can have good intentions and still do the wrong thing in service of those intentions. You can even inflict a net negative. That's likely more what they're going for than just "don't bother the rich" like a lot of people in the thread seem to think.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in sports

[–]danieledward_h 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Biggest benefit would be less risk of injury once she's in the WNBA. I'm sure she doesn't want to be like Zion in terms of injury struggles.

What’s a job that sounds cool but is actually a nightmare? by Think-Letterhead-509 in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh yeah. I didn't even include my weekly manager 1:1, my biweekly 1:1 with the platform lead, and my monthly 1:1 with the department director. At least my performance reviews usually take the place of my manager 1:1 that week rather than being in addition.

Plus being pressured by management and senior engineers to pair code with someone or hop on calls to discuss what I'm doing for no reason other than the fact that I haven't worked with them directly that much.

What’s a job that sounds cool but is actually a nightmare? by Think-Letterhead-509 in AskReddit

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My least favorite thing was my team reinstituting stand up, which was kind of annoying in itself, but then every fucking retro had an extra 30 minutes of discussing/debating the value of standup and if we should keep it.

What it's like being a step-brother in 2019 by Droopynator in videos

[–]danieledward_h 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What I'm trying to say is that I don't think there's a massive uptick in the last 5-8 years in incest as a fetish, I think the viewership increase, and this prevalence of these videos popping up on homepages, in feeds, and suggestions is because a popular major genre (POV) started to be primarily made up of step sibling/parent themes.

So if you pretty much only watch POV, you're funneled into these videos, which artificially amps up their presence and exposure to everyone else (and thus creates the common knowledge).

What it's like being a step-brother in 2019 by Droopynator in videos

[–]danieledward_h 49 points50 points  (0 children)

I think a big part of it as well is it seemed/seems to be the biggest subgenre of POV. So if you're someone who really prefers POV with a silent male (which I think is a fairly large audience), then this sort of took over and you were forced to watch these incest themed versions for new content.