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2 yr. ago

  • Gamers have good reason to love Valve for Steam alone -- not even accounting for their amazing games. They really do have the best gamer-oriented platform, and seemingly they care about gamers. I think they've done a lot to advance gaming on linux as well which is much appreciated.

    But, at least the way I see it, they still extract rents from game devs to an almost feudal degree.

    "Sure -- come sell your ~grain~ game -- but you'll have to give me a third of your profit because I own the ~town square~ platform/servers."

    Side note: It's pretty funny that for a while Valve had Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis on staff to analyze spontaneously emerging markets for digital items on Steam -- and he went on to write about the phenomenon above in his recent book Technofeudalism.

    Edit: formatting

  • bahahahahah I was so confused. wait til you get to their line about kobe

  • that is fundamentally untrue but i suppose you cant have a revolution without breaking some axiomatic eggs

  • awesome. that album is so sick. the lyrics have a shock factor that i really like. sometimes theyre straight up hilarious.

  • me too lol. the shirt with the lego guy ? that's the one i got

  • subversive punk is still around. It's still politically leftist. Jeff Rosenstock and his fans are pretty anarchist in ethos. Go to one of his shows, you'll find a whole lot of messaging about solidarity, mutual aid, building better world, fuck the police, etc. His lyrics aren't always about politics but they have an anti authoritarian edge.

    There's Infinity Knives x Brian Ennals who are mixing punk and hip hop in a very in your face political way and theyre GREAT.

    Viagra boys are a pop punk who satirize the alt-right, especially in their album Cave World.

    Mount Eerie is a noisy folk band that dabbles in some punk aesthetic -- their most recent albums contains themes of decolonization and anti-war.

    Honningbarna just came out with an amazing record called Soft Spot that has some leftist political themes, but not as overt as the others. Amazing sound though. Maybe more Hardcore than punk.

    There is no centralized counter culture because the media landscape is so different now. There's no radio to all listen to together. Communities are pretty isolated online. There are advantages and disadvantages. At the very least, decentralization of the counter culture prevents it from ever being squashed completely. On the other hand, decentralization makes it harder for people to see, and cause them to lose hope and feel alone. But as another said, you're here, aren't you?

  • You should check out the last chapter of Bullshit Jobs. The author makes a good case for UBI as a liberating force for people whose lives are tied to demeaning work. His idea is that UBI would free people from being dependent on an economic master in order to have access to basic human needs like shelter, food, water, healthcare, etc. but also less concrete needs such as sociability, leisure, and play. It would have to go hand in hand with some regulation on prices.

    He's an anarchist so he ostensibly has your same aversion (completely warranted) to the perpetuation of money and capitalism.

  • docker ps

  • I use navidrome to stream music from my desktop. Symphonium is my android client. It costs like 2 bucks but it's real good. Lots of different UI options.

    I haven't done it myself since Im the only one using it...but I think in order to have somewhere your family can login and download music ... That is a separate application from navidrome. Lidarr, Jackett, and somehow connect to qbittorent...I haven't done it yet but I think that's probably the route id go

  • That's awesome you got back into it for pure enjoyment!

    Gear acquisition syndrome is real though. Fortunately for me I was able to recover from it in the context of guitars. Unfortunately for me I picked up photography as a hobby...

  • I play guitar casually since a little before COVID. Becoming more fluent with it every time I play is an amazing feeling.

    Getting into a groove, putting my own spin/expressing myself with songs I like, and jamming with friends are experiences that are unmatched in enjoyment for me.

    Making up my own silly songs on the fly is fun too.

    Learning to play is the best thing I ever did. I had to get over the idea that it would be hard work to get good, or the idea that I'd never be as good as someone who started as a kid, or that I'd ever even be technically good, at all. Letting go of that stuff allowed me to enjoy each moment playing, and just have fun.

  • not sure how i can express how much i hate this comment. nice job.

  • I know it's semantics (er...is it diction?) and at the end of the day pretty pedantic, but this is the first time I've seen the suggestion that hierarchy necessitates authority, and that authority necessitates compulsion (or an institution, or a command/control relationship). I mean yeah, they definitely have those connotations, for sure. And maybe in the context of anarchist theory, this is their functional definition.

    But in a general sense, we still have hierarchies that are completely outside of the realm of social organization, like top down hierarchical categorization of...things...right? Like, stuff? And similarly, we have authorities that aren't necessarily relevant to compulsion, like an authority on a particular niche subject. I guess we're compelled to believe them, but, I dunno...

    I'm kinda thinking out loud here. But I guess if I met, say, a master woodworker, and she was guiding me through building a bookshelf, I'd still say she is the authority over my actions, even if I decided to do something contrary to her commands. For sure, she has the right to tell me how to build the bookshelf -- she is the expert, I recognize the authority over me in this matter -- and she retains the authority even if I defy her. Idk maybe I'm talking about a different definition of authority.

  • I wouldn't exactly call the workplace voluntary though? When the alternative is to be without "legitimate" access to primary needs like food, shelter, healthcare, etc.

    Id say it's more coercive than anything.

    But yeah voluntarily hierarchies still exist, it's just that normally they're meant to dissolve. Like a student-teacher hierarchy

  • I choose I. Why? I-C-E-D. Free? Yessiree. Cold and totally bold. Aloned and totally stoned.

    I is the place to be. I is the place for me. High is the state of me. I choose I.

  • There are a lot of language learning resources on the site i use. I did a whole Michel Thomas advanced audio course for portuguese that helped me learn the basics. What's the title of the french book your friend is looking for?

  • Anarcho-bidenism is crazy

  • I really don't think it is. For one thing, there's texted added to it that certainly wasn't part of the original. Then there's the matter of multiple versions of a similar line-drawing with text in the center floating around. And then finally, no mainstream media has released the image. It seems like someone just mocked this up and posted it on twitter.

    Although I'd be happy to be proven wrong.

  • Thats not the real thing though, is it?

  • I use inaturalist. You essentially take a pic, upload it, add info about its location and stuff, and it goes into a feed where others will see suggest the scientific name.

  • Steam Hardware @sopuli.xyz

    What emulated games hold up in 2025?

  • Videos @lemmy.world

    Tom Wessels: The Ecology of Coevolved Species

  • PC Gaming @lemmy.ca

    I just managed to upgrade from an i7-9700 to a 7800x3d. What should I play?

  • Ask Lemmy @lemmy.world

    Should I donate to Wikipedia?

  • Steam Hardware @sopuli.xyz

    Recommendations for games to listen to audiobooks to?

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    What are some books I can read about socialism/the state vs corporations/the economic and sociological side of government

  • Asklemmy @lemmy.ml

    What is your stretching routine in the morning?

  • cats @sh.itjust.works

    Suzie loves to sleep