sadbehr

joined 1 year ago
[–] sadbehr 10 points 1 year ago

Could this compulsory military service also alert authorities to people that aren't suitable to own private firearms?

[–] sadbehr 2 points 1 year ago

Also an awesome post metal band Isis. I have a t-shirt of theirs with the lyrics to a song called 'Dying Light' which is about death, the afterlife and reincarnation sorta stuff, needless to say I haven't been able to wear it in many years.

[–] sadbehr 4 points 1 year ago

And Goddess! (not a God.)

[–] sadbehr 7 points 1 year ago

Path of Exile on PS5 (I don't have access to PC/xbox).

According to the trophies, only 8.8% of players complete Part 1, with 4.4% completing Part 2. For context, Part 1 would take a new player maybe 20 hours, with Part 2 being a tiny bit shorter. Imo the most likely reason for this is new players bricking their characters. PoE is extremely complicated and if you don't know what you're doing you'll build and gear your toon so wrong that you'll get to a point where you can't progress and you don't have any way of fixing it.

2.3% of players reach level 80, with 0.9% reaching level 90. Context: After completing the campaign you'll be around level 70, getting to 80 isn't difficult, long or hard. Level 90 requires a slight investment of time and effort.

If you've never played PoE before these stats might seem low, but for people that have played it I'm sure it makes a lot of sense! It does to me anyway.

[–] sadbehr 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Service provider? "Please select your Lemmy service provider".

[–] sadbehr 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

So there was this man in Bulgaria who drove trains for a living.

He loved his job. Driving a train had been his dream ever since he was a child. He loved to make the train go as fast as possible. Unfortunately, one day he was a little too reckless and caused a crash. He made it out, but a single person died. Well, needless to say, he went to court over this incident. He was found guilty, and was sentenced to death by electrocution. When the day of the execution came, he requested a single banana as his last meal. After eating the banana, he was strapped into the electric chair. The switch was flown, sparks flew, and smoke filled the air - but nothing happened. The man was perfectly fine.

Well, at the time, there was an old Bulgarian law that said a failed execution was a sign of divine intervention, so the man was allowed to go free. Somehow, he managed to get his old job back driving the train. Having not learned his lesson at all, he went right back to driving the train with reckless abandon. Once again, he caused a train to crash, this time killing two people. The trial went much the same as the first, resulting in a sentence of execution. For his final meal, the man requested two bananas. After eating the bananas, he was strapped into the electric chair. The switch was thrown, sparks flew, smoke filled the room - and the man was once again unharmed.

Well, this of course meant that he was free to go. And once again, he somehow managed to get his old job back. To what should have been the surprise of no one, he crashed yet another train and killed three people. And so he once again found himself being sentenced to death. On the day of his execution, he requested his final meal: three bananas.

"You know what? No," said the executioner. "I've had it with you and your stupid bananas and walking out of here unharmed. I'm not giving you a thing to eat; we're strapping you in and doing this now." Well, it was against protocol, but the man was strapped in to the electric chair without a last meal. The switch was pulled, sparks flew, smoke filled the room - and the man was still unharmed. The executioner was speechless.

The man looked at the executioner and said, "Oh, the bananas had nothing to do with it. I'm just a bad conductor.

[–] sadbehr 4 points 1 year ago

Deep Rock Galactic? It has the mining component....that's about it though. It's co-op mining along with first person shooting combat.

I know it's not exactly what you asked for but I thought I'd throw it out there.

[–] sadbehr 1 points 1 year ago

I'm not trying to victim blame or anything here, but I'm wondering if those same people that notified Google notified their local government. The article doesn't mention about that unfortunately so I don't know.

[–] sadbehr 65 points 1 year ago (6 children)

After looking at the picture of the bridge in the article, it looks like it should have either been fixed or blocked by a large only moveable by heavy machinery barrier of some description.

What if someone was using a 15 year old paper map? Would they get to sue the cartographer?
What if the bridge had collapsed yesterday? Last week? As much as I don't like Google, I don't think they're at fault here.

[–] sadbehr 13 points 1 year ago (3 children)

My vote is for consolidating the two. If there is ever a need in the future it can be split again.

Thanks for all the works you do.

[–] sadbehr 2 points 1 year ago

Yea it is but it's still made in New Zealand, and personally I suspect it was a way for them to break into the Chinese market, especially as Tencent facilitate online gaming services. I don't have any proof of that, it's just something I've thought about.

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