Ha! An astute observation to be certain.
Ha! An astute observation to be certain.
But... they do tend to be older, fatter and poor. Those are some very highly correlated comorbidities to COVID.
“Relatively competent” being the operative phrase.
Yeah... this is a terrible understanding of the 1st Amendment. We should absolutely and unequivocally criminalize these protests because it passes strict scrutiny.
the virus lays dormant and then reactivates
I would love that. If it was VR meaning PSVR 2 (because I own PSVR), I’d day one in for $750 without a second thought.
Except, now they have the bandwidth to have 4K graphics plus 60FPS. PS Pro targeted that, but with HDMI 2.0 and the 7-ish year old chipset, they really didn’t have the capability to push 4K HDR at 60FPS.
There are plenty of people with a PS4 who never upgraded to the Pro who can enjoy every game on the Pro. I did it merely because I like to adopt the latest tech.
You spent way more on your PC than I spent. My PS4 Pro doesn’t need to be upgraded with new parts every so often.
I mean, that’s just not true. The GPU is rumored to be equivalent to a RTX 2070 or GTX 1080. That’s pretty “decent.”
Good point. Those 30"+ high refresh rate monitors can be a bit pricey, like rivaling my 65" OLED, the thing I use every day to watch TV and game.
Right? I’ve had a PS4 since 2014 and PS4 Pro since 2016. I’ve never had to do anything with either of them. So, I spent a total of $800 over 6 years on hardware and I finished (and am now replaying for the 4th time) Jedi Fallen Order and it looked amazing on my LG OLED. Might it look better on a PC? Probably, and I’m…
A few years because developers can optimize for one piece of hardware instead of nearly infinite combinations.
I would agree, $500 has to be the highest price they’re targeting unless they do like $600 to double the storage (I’d pay for that), but got to have the $500 base price.
Really? For something that competes with decent gaming PCs and has exclusive games that are basically unmatched, over $400 is a bridge too far?
Seldom do I ever agree with the opinions of the writers here, but Joker was not a good film. The best I can say was it wasn’t bad.
Seems to me that it’d be a very good time to utilize your credit card’s chargeback.
Most courts have ruled, the mere offering of a job is the “consideration” to make a non-compete legally binding. Some have gone so far as to say, if an employer wants you to sign a non-compete or something like that after they’ve hired you, allowing you to keep your job is sufficient consideration.
If you sign a contract with a term, you’re potentially outside the realm of at-will employment and if you (or the employer, for that matter) breach the contract, you’re potentially doing a lot more than forfeiting bonuses, you could owe the employer liquidated damages equalling the cost of your replacement or…
Just wondering, did you actually read your studies? Here’s part of the abstract from the first one: