I was going through my Wal-Mart+ subscription plan that I got for free and I saw their offers. One of which was EMeals, that was a 60-day trial. I thought that this was like Blue Apron or other meal delivery services so I thought I’d take a crack at it and hope that it would get me on a path to eat better.

Turns out, it’s just a meal planner. And it’s absurd to me why and how would anyone pay for something when there are countless and countless recipes and meal planners readily available for free. Who’d the fuck would want to pay for a planner? That’s like paying for a calendar app.

  • Tudsamfa@lemmy.world
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    Online subscription models, gacha and AAAA price tag games.

    Not everyone wants to be a cybercriminal, god knows I’m one of them, but almost every person already has a backlog of games, an old classic that they want to experience again or community favourite that has gotten a lot of mods. Those are all free. And even if you want to spend money on something, why would you spend it on this year’s hyped up game when last year’s is still just as playable and at a discount?

    That being said, I did buy Balatro full price, so I ought to know the answer.

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      The Youtube channel “answer in progress” made a video about gacha and I still don’t get it. I hate collecting junk, even more when I can’t choose which junk I get.

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        I’ve never played any of those games myself, but here’s what I have gathered from a video essay:

        You just begin to play it somehow, you get introduced to the Gacha mechanics, and then it’s one of 2 ways: Either you spend a lot of money in the game because they are literally designed like Casinos to fuel your gambling addiction, like clouding your judgement how much a round of gambling is actually worth with many in game currencies.

        Or you spend time in the game to grind premium resources, and your brain rewards you for it with the thought “at least I’m not spending money”, not realizing that the house developer also wins if you do that. An example i giving rewards for players who write strategy guides, something they otherwise would have to pay real money to a developer for.

        We really have to hate more on those regulators who failed to protect gambling addicts from candy crush on crack.

      • Tudsamfa@lemmy.world
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        Oh, you mean that video, about blind boxes and gachapon.

        Seen that one as well, really absurd to see that channel promote “healing your inner child”, by buying into something that feels like an amalgam of lootboxes, that ruined online games, and Funko-pops, which cannibalised physical game stores. I read through the comments many times to maybe understand, but it seems few people actually care about the gambling addicts there as well.

    • TORFdot0@lemmy.world
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      My problem is that I wait 20 years to late to play games and they cost more second hand than they originally did. GameCube fan problem

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Oh man. In-game currency and gacha stuff can get fucked.

      I’m not a big gamer but I like having something on my phone to pass the time.

      Happy to pay to install or for expansions or to remove advertising or whatever but paying for finite in-game stuff is just shit.

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    People pay for streaming and then complaining that their shows keep disappearing. Knowing full well that they are only allowed to watch the shows as long as the streaming service allows them to watch.

    I truly don’t understand it. If they wanna do it go for it I’m not going to sit here and rip on them. I just don’t understand why. I say go by the disc so that way you own it. Then rip it to make your own digital file. Now with that digital file, you can do anything you want with it.

    • flubba86@lemmy.world
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      I get your point of view, and I personally use Jellyfin with my own library. But I have a different perspective about people complaining about shows disappearing from services.

      People like complaining about things, it’s cathartic, and it doesn’t necessarily mean they have to do anything about it.

      Imagine you have a favourite restaurant. One day you go in and that thing you really love isn’t in the menu anymore. You can grumble about it to the staff, complain to your friends, but you’ll just order a different item.

      If next week your next favourite thing disappears from the menu, you’ll complain some more, or maybe just start going to a different restaurant. Yes, there is always the option to get the ingredients and make it yourself at home, but that’s a whole extra level of effort. For most people, the effort to complain a bit and choose a different thing from the menu is far less effort than making it yourself at home.

    • bradboimler@lemmy.world
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      There are legit services where you can buy digital content and keep “forever.” No subscriptions. That’s how I prefer to consume my content. AFAIK I still have access to everything.

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        I’m not familiar with ones like that. Which ones allow you to download and keep it offline so it will still work if that company goes out of business.

        Not trying to be a jerk I just haven’t heard of one that does that.

        • bradboimler@lemmy.world
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          You’re not being a jerk :)

          I use YouTube for this myself but I’m under the impression that Apple TV lets you do this too. The content is still hosted by them and I’m sure you can’t easily download the content and do whatever with it, but I’m under the impression that what I’ve paid for (the one time per piece of content) is the rights to stream it from them forever. Content has not disappeared for me like it has with Netflix (and what finally drove me away from it).

          The only thing I’m trying to get across is that there are other streaming models present beside the subscription one everyone is doing. And this model that I’ve highlighted is the one I prefer.

    • SethranKada@lemmy.ca
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      Completely agree. I’ll never pay for entertainment, with the sole exception of videogames and the rare content creator I want to support. Everything else, I’ll do everything in my power to have offline and backuped so I never lose access.

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    My coworkers will walk into work with Dunkin or Starbucks lattes… we have not only free coffee at work, but access to an espresso machine with milk steamer.

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      It’s not that odd that they have a preference, even if it costs them. My work provides tea bags and milk, but I bring my own because I like them more.

    • ClassifiedPancake@discuss.tchncs.de
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      So at my work the coffee is shit because it’s a fully automatic coffee machine and it is also not properly cleaned. I usually make my own at home and bring a thermos.

    • Soulifix@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      Really depends on the workplace. I will not drink coffee and I’m no longer drinking hot chocolate even from my work. Mainly because a lot of my co-workers are slobs and everything is unsanitized. I had just witnessed last night, someone from day maintenance, had their gloves still on (presumably from touch dirty trash bins, scrubbing toilets .etc) just go about touching some things before realizing he needed them off.

      And I ended up vomiting last sunday because nobody checks expiration dates on what we have and I ended up drinking hot chocolate that might’ve been expired. So, it depends on the workplace.

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    I do not get people who still pay for cable tv. My dad pays like 120 dollars a month for it and the programming is horrible, the ads are insane, all the best sports shit is on streaming services now, I do not understand it at all.

    • Achyu@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Inertia?
      Or is there some local channel that they like that doesn’t have a youtube presence?

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      How technical is your dad?

      Also honestly. Sometimes it’s a lot nicer to just push a button and have something come on.

      One of the main reasons I use Plex is their random feature. “Wanna watch a syndicated episodic show and don’t care which ep? Press random” vs other streaming services you have to actually choose an episode.

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          That’s why. My folks still have cable and pay for HBO. That’s how me and my siblings are able to watch stuff we don’t want to download on max :)

          My dad jokes that hes happy he knows how to turn on his phone … Now his TV since that’s “too complicated”

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          So… Iirc you can shuffle all of the episodes in a library … Not sure about cross library. I just have one for TV and one for movies.

          I know you can definitely make a smart playlist for the shows you want to shuffle through and go from there. Like I have a bunch of a few episodic tv shows, added them through regex to a smart playlist and hit shuffle all the time.

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      This drives me insane. The 5 gal jugs are so cheap to refill and keep using. I used one of those with a hand pump and a thin 1.5 gal jugs for my fridge for constant cold water when I lived where tap water wasn’t doable. It was like 10¢ a gallon to refill the jugs and I always had delicious cold water at the ready. There is absolutely no need to create so much waste

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      When you put tap water in a bottle and put it in the freezer, so you’d have a cold bottle of water for an entire summer day, the water from the tap tastes “saltier” for some reason, while bottled “spring” water doesn’t. The “saltier” taste is kinda unpleasant 🤷‍♂️

      Also my city has some chemical spill into the river where the city gets the water supply from, they gave out a emergency alert very late, and the city wasn’t really transparent about that whole ordeal, some people in my city are already doubting the safety of the tap water, reminds me of Flint, Michigan, so I kinda just don’t like the tap water 😖

      • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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        Undersink filter with a dedicated drinking water tap. Removes the chlorine taste that is probably what makes you think salty. You can get the whole setup for $75 and install it yourself. The filters are $40ish and last 6-12 months.

        Some fridges have cold filtered water taps built in.

      • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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        There are good filtering systems you can get to add to your sink or water supply. At most you’re looking at a couple hundred for something that will last years. The water in plastic bottles is not immune to leeching things from the bottles as well, but I guess it’s a matter of weighing which you prefer.

      • SSTF@lemmy.world
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        Reverse osmosis filter, you can just get an under the sink one of you don’t plan on drinking your shower water. Kind of pricey up front, and you have to replace the filters every so often, but it gives good taste and peace of mind for filtering.

        I am telling you from first hand viewing that bottled water plants use the same kind of filtering.

    • Eugenia@lemmy.ml
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      In my area in Greece, the water is not safe, my brother who used to work in the water containers says it’s full of rats. We all buy bottles. It would be nice to be environmentally conscious about it, but there’s no choice about it.

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    As an American, Turbo Tax. I’ve been using FreeTaxUSA for almost 20 years with no problems, without paying for filing software.

    But if I weren’t American, my answer would probably be: tax software.

    • Skeezix@lemmy.world
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      In many other countries (such as mine) you dont use tax software. The government figures out what you owe or overpaid. Because they have all the info they need to know that.

    • Soulifix@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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      It’s funny that the IRS has now been offering their own tax-free service. Intuit thought they could strong-arm people but even the IRS thought “no bruh, you’re crazy”.

      I just never saw the appeal of paying for tax software/services, well maybe I can see it in services because there’s still a lot of people that have trouble with filing taxes and they may be in unique tax situations that they don’t understand.

      But Tax Software makes it stupid easy to understand so it should not be something we pay for.

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        For my simple needs (mortgage, 401k, couple different IRAs, and a managed investment account) it did great.

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      Most countries don’t have tax software.

      They have a website usually. A free one, from the government. That calculates their taxes for them. You just have to check if it is correct from your side.

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      Okay, to preface I really hate giving Google money, but I hate ads more, and paying for Premium also removes ads on YouTube apps across platforms. It also in some minuscule way rewards the creators I watch, but real support comes from Patreon.

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        YouTube charges too much. It costs more than Netflix! They need like a $6/mo plan or something.

        • Robust Mirror@aussie.zone
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          In Australia they offer premium lite for $9 AUD a month that removes ads on normal YouTube but still has it on shorts and music.

        • AnonStoleMyPants@sopuli.xyz
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          I mean, it depends on how much you use it, no? I use YouTube more than Netflix and the like (most of the time anyway). Not that I have YouTube premium but still.

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        Yeah I’m with you. I know there’s some way to block ads on any device if you are really dedicated but I don’t want to get a PHD in ad blocking just to not have ads on YT on my phone

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        It also gives a “free” music service, and while it’s not excellent by any means, that keeps me from spending MORE money on another music service.

        I just like that I can log in on my AppleTV and it works immediately with no ads or bullshit.

      • GreenSofaBed@lemmy.zip
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        Yeah I pay because I get ad free videos and YT music, so I could cancel Spotify, which is almost the same price for only music.

    • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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      I’m at a point in my life where I’ll pay for the media I’ll watch. If I’m not willing to pay for it, I won’t watch it. I also don’t want to watch ads.

      • MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        "Ah, yes I see I see, and that’s very understandable. Thank you for paying us by the way.

        Now, since you’ve been so loyal for all these years…what about [slides agreement across the table] you pay for it…AND you watch ads?"

        – Basically every streaming service hopping on the bandwagon at this point

        • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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          Streaming services are raising prices because prestige television was expensive and are using ads as a way to reduce the bill.

          And you don’t have to pay for streaming if you don’t find it too be worth it. I’ve cancelled subscriptions because the increased price wasn’t worth it.

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            Sidenote: Lol I’m getting downvotes for mocking streaming giants and ads on Lemmy. That’s different 🤔.

            Honestly, I hear you. Media isn’t easy to make and takes a ton of talented people a lot of hours to accomplish. I also drop off of subscribing to stuff if it was really nice but “enshittified” into forcing ads into every interaction.

            Something needs to change fundamentally though, because we’re once again on the cable-TV slope of “20 minutes of entertainment extended to 45 minutes by interrupting it with the exact same ad of a mega corporation pretending to be an underdog influencer.”

            My personal take is that if your average person were paid fairly, they’d have the money to spend on entertainment where ad-pollution wouldn’t be necessary, and if the entertainment distributors/platforms/whatevs asked the fair amount required to pay everyone involved fairly, everyone would be happy.

            Lol a guy can dream.

            • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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              And I wish that kind of world existed where people could fund that kind of media landscape.

              I’ve just been aware that, for over a decade, streaming prices weren’t sustainable because they were subsidized by cable and broadcast.

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      I have lots of ad blockers. But my father watches YouTube on the LG TV app. I don’t live there anymore and hearing the ads from the other room became offensive to the family.

      It was easier to just buy a premium family plan and call it a day.

      • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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        Just solved this problem actually. Smart tube app. Download on your tv with a browser and sideload the apk. Dunno about console but I’m sure there’s some solution.

        • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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          Seconded on Smart Tube TV. Frankly, it works better than ublock on Firefox most days as YT doesn’t go out of its way to slow it down.

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            Also, I feel like it’s more lightweight too. The regular YT app was lagging a lot, Smart Tube TV was running great.

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        There is literally a discord, with a link here on Lemmy, with links in said discord to download sources. Plus there are help and troubleshooting threads.

    • communism@lemmy.ml
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      Free porn tends to be full of abuse towards its actors. Not that paid porn is automatically ethical but there are definitely indie options where no one is being coerced into performing sexual acts they’re not comfortable with. Also if you have a niche fetish sometimes the only options are paywalled.

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      How is it surprising people pay for operating systems? The vast majority of computers sold are bundled with an operating system license, and most people just use what came with the computer.

      • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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        Uhhhh you answered your own question. Why pay for an OS when it should either be included, or free Linux.

        Therefore it’s surprising when people pay for an OS.

        • Firipu@startrek.website
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          I use windows. I haven’t paid for a windows key since windows 7 iirc. Windows has been free for years. (I know you pay with your data etc. Good luck convincing average Joe who uses all social media services that this even matters)

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              Where are these surprising purchases then? People either use it for free, in which case they haven’t paid for it, or they bought it in a bundle with their PC, which is again very common.

              Who is actually buying Windows standalone?

              • AgentRocket@feddit.org
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                Who is actually buying Windows standalone?

                People who build their own PC and want to use an OS that they are familiar with. Especially when you want to game, windows is just easier than any free os and you can get a legit key for 20-30 bucks, while pirating windows has become a lot more complicated since XP.

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                  Every time I saw someone I know built a PC, they reused the license key from their previous one. And the first one was a free key from their university.

                  It definitely happens though!

              • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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                Exactly. You can buy windows OS standalone without it coming in a package with a pc. It’s rare. That’s why it’s surprising.

                • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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                  Fair enough. To me the fact people don’t do it and that it’s rare is perfectly expected. In other words, I would be surprised if people commonly did that, but they don’t, so I don’t see anything surprising. But I can see your point of view, it’s looking at it a bit differently.

          • Soulifix@kbin.melroy.orgOP
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            Sames. I haven’t paid for a Windows OS since Windows XP.

            The only way I ever got to the latest Windows OS, is either being given a machine with the latest version on it or I get a PC built but pirate a serial or a copy.

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            That’s not the point. You’re buying a pc, it comes with it and sometimes costs extra.

            This sub is about what’s surprising things people buy. Buying an OS is surprising, because it’s either part of the package deal for a new pc, or you can just use linux.

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              I think what you are trying to say is “buying an OS not as part of a package deal is surprising”. To that I would agree.

              But most people are buying an OS as part of a package deal, so most purchases of an OS are not surprising.

              • Yawweee877h444@lemmy.world
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                I’m not “trying” to say anything lol. OP said operating systems. I’m talking about operating systems. Not a pc that is packaged with one.

                • dev_null@lemmy.ml
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                  I’m talking about operating systems. Not a pc that is packaged with one.

                  So yes, looks like I correctly understood what you are trying to say, and agree with you that buying a standalone operating system is weird. But nobody does that.

                  Looks like you consider buying something in a bundle to not be buying it, which is a valid opinion, though myself I disagree. Most OS purchases happen in a bundle with a PC, and every time I bought a laptop I asked for Windows to be removed from the bundle, which made it cheaper a bit (as I was going to install Linux anyway). If removing Windows from the bundle is making it cheaper, then clearly you were buying it and paying for it for when you don’t, as most people do.

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      So many people I know complain about windows having ads, that it’s auto installing bloatware, has annoying checks, forces you to login…

      I paid the full price about a decade ago and haven’t been bothered by any of that. And yes, I’ve upgraded to windows 11

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        I’ve had the exact same experience. People on this site don’t like when others don’t hate Windows.

        I like it because it just works.

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          It definitely “just works” alright. And damn do I appreciate that on the machine I like to use to relax

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      5 days ago

      I’m still waiting for a proper excel replacement. No, google sheets and libre office don’t cut it. I literally have a copy of office 2019 that I have to finagle to install only that app and nothing else.

      • Matriks404@lemmy.world
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        The funny thing is, after few years of using the Google Sheets, I can’t go back to Excel, because it has some weird behaviours and some shitty UX that drives me crazy.

        Of course I am not saying that you can even do 1/3 of what Excel can do, but for basic uses I find it much easier to use.

        • Broken@lemmy.ml
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          Oh for sure. Excel is hot garbage when it comes to UI. I really want a replacement so I don’t have to rely on Microsoft. I use Libre Office for every other office app, and a more sane experience.

      • CrimeDad@lemmy.crimedad.work
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        Rarely, yes. Mostly I listen to free podcasts and music that I’ve paid for or otherwise acquired once. I don’t understand paying a subscription for a lower quality version of that. Maybe there are a few live programs that are only available on SiriusXM, but that’s a tenuous value proposition.

    • friend_of_satan@lemmy.world
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      As somebody who grew up with perfect tap water and then moved to Detroit, I used to think this.

      Edit: I guess I should say I still think this for a lot of places. When I go to my parents house the first thing I do is drink a big cup of their amazing tap water.

      • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Hear hear. When I rented the water was great, didn’t use a filter. Out where my parents live, their water is brown occasionally.

      • aes@programming.dev
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        6 days ago

        Tap water is so cheap it might as well be free, and it’s probably included in the rent in a lot of places.

        I guess it’s not free in places that need to have a revolution first?

        • TargaryenTKE@lemmy.world
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          Slightly more expensive in places with local water scarcity, like the American southwest. But yeah, we still need a revolution

        • Andrei@lemmy.ml
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          6 days ago

          My water is inexpensive: 1 Cubometer of water about USD 0.29 and USD 0.13 to deliver it to the apartment (pipe system, water infrastructure).

      • MrsDoyle@sh.itjust.works
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        6 days ago

        Where I am the cost of water is rolled into the local authority tax. It’s not metered, so it feels free. It’s pretty good water too.

    • fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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      Yeah ok.

      In my 20’s I over-enjoyed a great many things.

      Now in my 40’s I don’t drink booze, do drugs, smoke cigarettes, and also try to avoid sugar and caffeine. I also have kids now so I sold my motorbikes because that seemed irresponsible.

      So yeah, I do purchase poncy imported italian sparkling mineral water because… it’s a nice indulgence.

  • SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.ml
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    The meal subscription services strike me as premade salads on steroids. You’re paying a premium for all the labor, ingredients, (excessive) packaging, shipping, their profit, etc and you still have to put it together and cook it. It really isn’t that hard to look up a couple of recipes, buy the ingredients (you’d probably be going to the store anyway) and prep for 30 or so minutes a night. If you make full recipes you’ll probably have leftovers so you won’t even have to cook the next day.

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      I was actually enjoying Blue Apron for a while, mainly because it was stuff that I’d never thought to try making before, but the amount of trash generated from each box delivered was too much for my conscience. I wish they didn’t use so many plastic wrappers and had some way of returning the boxes with the insulation.

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        The insulation alone with them and Hello Fresh had me hang them up for good after a couple tries. It was nice to try recipes I wouldn’t think to search online for but yeah, that packaging situation was god-awful.

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        5 days ago

        And it’s way too much charge for the quality of the meat and produce. They give ground pork at beef steak prices and the produce isn’t as carefully selected as I would have picked.

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      6 days ago

      I agree for the big ones, but we have a local one I’ve subscribed to a few times, for a couple months at a time.

      They pull all the ingredients from local farms, do local delivery or pickup at farmer’s markets, and they’re minimal on packaging, and they reuse the bags and ice packs. I haven’t done it in a while but it was pretty nice and it was helpful to break out of the routine of the same meals week in and out.

    • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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      Did one for a while. It cut down on grocery store trips and meal planning so it gave some peace of mind, but I prefer either cooking simple meals or large meals (for leftovers) and they were neither. Most were delicious but took anywhere from 30-60 minutes. Most sea portioned for two so I ended up cooking nearly every single night and I hit a wall with it.

      I can definitely see why people do it, sometimes the cost is worth the convenience.

    • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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      6 days ago

      Small bits of code can be made and maintained as a hobby or a passion project, but larger things begin to require money. Although a lot of FOSS is maintained by volunteers, money still has its role in the equation.

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        6 days ago

        Most big FOSS projects are done by developers who get paid for that.
        They work at Red Hat, Canonical, SUSE, Google or Microsoft and write FOSS while on the clock.

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      6 days ago

      I know this sub, and basically most of Lemmy, are pro Linux. But honestly? It’s not as good as Windows and macos for everyday folk. We are kidding ourselves.

      It CAN do anything they can, but it’s way too hard, and you might have to code your own drivers for some of it.

      You pay for it to just work, and that’s why I 100% get why you pay for an OS.

      Note: I don’t think anyone feel like they even pay for their OS, if it’s not enterprise. It’s preinstalled, nobody thinks further than that.

      • VeganCheesecake@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        Depends. My mother’s computer didn’t have the hardware necessary to drive Win11, so I explained the options, and she said she’d try Linux.

        She’s on Fedora Workstation on both her Desktop and Laptop now, both relatively standard HP Computers (the Desktop being very, very old, however).

        She can connect to her work server via Citrix and access the software she needs. She can take work calls via MicroSIP. She can edit documents locally with onlyoffice. She can do whatever else she needs in the browser. None of this needed any non-standard drivers or packages, except for MicroSIP, for which Wine needed to be installed, though it worked without any special configuration.

        So it can work perfectly well. Depending on the use case.

      • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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        Generally I agree, but

        you might have to code your own drivers for some of it

        is a bit hyperbolic. Most of the time, most users will be using pretty standard hardware to do pretty standard things. They won’t need fancy drivers to do it.

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        6 days ago

        In my experience, Linux Mint “just works”. What you’re describing are distros like arch.

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          I know gaming has gotten better, but I still run into trouble. It “just works” on Windows.

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            i don’t think it “just works” on windows, but people (even regular people) are used to the workarounds that you have to do to get windows to work as they want

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            Their activation doesn’t “just work.” I paid Microsoft for a license. And I have spent hours with their support.

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        This is the main reason I still keep Windows around. The majority of my stuff “just works” much better on Linux, but every once in a while, you need to interact with someone else via some weird proprietary software and it’s not really reasonable to go “sorry, can’t do it because Linux”, nor is it reasonable to spend several hours figuring out for Linux when I’m likely only using it once.

        Windows is completely free though. I don’t even bother to remove the watermark.

      • Delphia@lemmy.world
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        You wont win this one. If you think of the number of internet users in the world once you eliminate apple users, people who do everything on their phone or a tablet, people who use chromebooks but have no idea that its linux, people who “just buy a new one” whenever their laptop/desktop acts up and people who will never touch anything that isnt a prebuilt with a warranty you are left with an abysmally small number of people in the grand scheme. Thats the filters you have to apply before you get to people who might run Linux… and they are all on Lemmy.

      • neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Over 3 different computers, I have never not had some bug on windows after a clean install.

        Stuff like, text inputs not working on sticky notes, screenshots not working, now I’m having driver issues where some windows flicker black rapidly. I need to do another fresh install to fix it.

        I can’t even think of a single bug I’ve had using Linux. If it were not for a single piece of software not working on Linux by any means, I’d be using that.

        The only games I’ve not had work on Linux straight away are games with anti-cheat, so I understand windows gamers using windows to play them, but otherwise Linux gaming has been basically flawless.

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        I think the opposite. It works well for every day folks, but those of us with extra hardware, gaming peripherals, macros, etc have a real struggle getting it all to work, easily, out of the box, on the first try.

      • SocialMediaRefugee@lemmy.ml
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        Yup. I work with both and I greatly prefer working with linux now but I get paid to stare at it, dig into config files, understand file systems, etc. The average consumer does not want to do this and doesn’t give a shit about internals, they just want to click install and work which windows is pretty good at. If you told them they needed to edit a config file and play with services your customer support lines would be jammed.

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    6 days ago

    Gray market license keys for software. The money you’re paying for these will never make it to the developer, so you might as well pirate.

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      A lot of them don’t even lie about it as much if you read between the lines. GreenManGaming, HumbleBundle are the exceptions to that.

      But places like CDKeys, G2A .etc yeah you can’t be assured that anything you buy from them is going back to the developer. If the developers so much even hears the existence of these kinds of sites, they’d be protesting to have them shut down.

    • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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      On that same idea, camrips sold out of the back of a car. I knew someone who bragged about being able to get them and I always thought they looked like ass. They just liked acting like they had hood connections.

  • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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    6 days ago

    Books.

    Most librarians are knowledgeable and love helping you find something, or getting it in from another library.

    • MonkRome@lemmy.world
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      Every book I try to check out has a 3 month to 3 year wait-list. Not exactly a convenient way to read.

      • RBWells@lemmy.world
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        Where are you? My wait here (mid size city in Florida) is usually 0-3weeks, unless they don’t have it at all, then I request and it can be 6 weeks to infinity. But they will send hard copy books around between libraries not even in our county, and the electronic collection is huge too.

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          I’ve been trying e-books, usually when I find something I want to read it will say something like you are 38th in line. Minnesota.

          • RBWells@lemmy.world
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            Here when there is a big line like that, usually they will temporarily rent more licenses. So it will say 38th in line for one of 8 copies, not just 38th. If it’s a popular new book they do that. I read mostly sci fi and fantasy, occasionally smut, it’s been solid for those categories. Have found many enjoyable reads and those sorts of books are great to read on the device. Stories. Informational/resource books less so, for me it is easier to go back & forth with a paper book.

            ETA I don’t know why someone would down vote you for sharing your experience, that’s silly.

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            I see this often as well. I usually put in holds on several things at a time. I often find that the had is passed to me much quicker than the estimated time when queues are long like this. I suspect people are in line for several things and just pass along when it becomes available and they’re reading something else. I similarly will pass on holds when the become available and I am reading something else.

            Tldr, I recommend putting in the hold anyway, and seeing what happens. But put in holds on lots of options for best results.

    • communism@lemmy.ml
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      Not everyone has access to libraries. However anyone with internet access and a device capable of reading ebooks can read for free with libgen, zlib, and sci hub.

      • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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        If you have access to the internet you’ll be able to get access to library ebooks. There are some libraries that’ll give non residents access.

        • communism@lemmy.ml
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          Usually only available to citizens of the same country. I don’t actually know of any libraries that allow access to people who are neither residents nor citizens of the country, but there may be some.

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            Which country are you in? In the US, Harris County Public Library in Texas gives free access to basically anyone with an email address.

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            I researched last year and there were several libraries. Unfortunately I didn’t save my results. Check out Reddit heh.

    • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I like owning my own stuff.
      By that proxy you could also just rent your home instead of owning a living space.

      • RBWells@lemmy.world
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        Books, though? If I had to buy every book I’ve read, I would be destitute and need a hundred storage units. Even with a concerted effort not to buy books I have a whole shelf of them.

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        That’s a crazy comparison. If I could rent a home for free from the library I would feel like I’d won the lottery. I absolutely would do that. Is renting from the library not free where you are?

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          Depends. My local library is but the major library in the neighbouring city has a fee associated with being a member lending something. Entry is free though.

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    6 days ago

    I was surprised to hear that a coworker suscribes to one of the streaming services to stream shows from PBS. First of all, it’s free OTA. Second, I think they have an app.

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      The app is paid. It’s absurd to me that one would need to pay for a pbs subscription since the you’re paying for the original funding in the first place.