practicalbatman
PracticalBatman
practicalbatman

usually missing pieces of the bumper or whatever

anything with shitty nissan cvt’s is just another nail in their eventual coffin. They need to stop it with that nonsense.

No, I mean a modern 240z. 

Nissan’s just been cheaping out for a long time, all to create mediocre passenger cars and “sports cars” that fall apart at anything more than 8/10. To rehash it yet again, with more power, just seems a little noncompetitive. I guess minimal effort with maximum price pretty on brand though.

My dad had a pair of CBX’s for many years. It was kinda like a VW R32 - it made wonderful noise but didn’t back up the sound with outright performance.. but man, holding a gear instead of upshifting was oh so nice. One had a 6-6 exhaust and it sounded totally bonkers (but uncomfortable for more than a few minutes

Yeah but with a cbx, for that 30 minutes the carbs stay perfectly synced, it runs so smooth and sounds so good ;)

I had an hour long meeting with Oculus for Business regarding using their products in education. As soon as I told them it was for education, they just sighed and admitted there were zero chances they’d be able to meet regulatory compliance requirements for use in education. If we’d gone the business headset route

Hey, the Altima - or, the official car of questionable credit.

Isn’t the new z just another reskin of the same car they’ve been selling for 20 years though? It’s got a new engine, yay, but... it’s just a slightly evolved 370z, which was just a slightly evolved 350z. It’s an attractive reskin I’ll admit.

You need to separate what the licensing agreement actually covers, vs. what they say they will use it for. There’s nothing restricting them to that narrow scope of usage. That’s the difficulty with licensing agreements, they tend to be overly broad or nebulous so as to mean whatever the company wants it to mean down

Why is this a slideshow

Oh people always try to pick things apart, so I figured I would just refer you in that direction.

The terms and conditions specifically spell out that they’re subject to change - that’s a big warning indicator right off the top. Most don’t actually *read* terms and conditions of provider agreements, but if they did they’d be shocked. People would certainly use things like Discord a lot less freely if they realized

Public carrying of tennis rackets is about to become much more popular

You should read the licensing agreement for discord, especially as it pertains to video/pictures posted in discord.

ugh cvt’s are so gross

That’s a false equivalency. If you have an employment contract that commits to a certain number of hours at a certain rate of pay, that’s a job. If you are using someone else’s platform and performing a recreational activity for a non agreed upon rate of compensation, then you *have no agreement*. You are a performing

The platforms can do what they want - the terms and conditions are freely available when you start streaming. You are playing video games for money, and assuming the person setting up all the back end infrastructure and support aren’t going to change the terms of the agreement. That’s short sighted and poor planning -

You’re still considering playing video games, a recreational activity, on a streaming platform, which you don’t control and is notoriously volatile, a consistent stream of income. It isn’t, so they can take what they get. If this is actually a problem for streamers, it’s because they planned poorly. Whomever runs the

Yeah its growing, but its also leveling off and people see what their contribution is actually *worth* now - and they don’t like it.