addys

joined 1 year ago
[–] addys@lemmy.ninja 0 points 1 year ago

Its you who is straight up lyong brah

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja 2 points 1 year ago

You see to be justifying that? As in "well of course the terrorists are stealing the fuel"? And yet you are at the same time blaming Israel for the fuel shortage? Wow.

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja 8 points 1 year ago

Excellent write up! Israeli here. Everything you wrote is spot on. There's obviously a lot more you didn't cover, but it's a good intro :D

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja 16 points 1 year ago

The system is rigged against you. Any "gameable" aspect of the system which could be used to even the playing field is either regulated (ie you need a specific license) or billed in such as way to make it unprofitable (or at least transfer all the risk to you).

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja -4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

or maybe they just believe in "from the river to the sea".

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

yeah nobody calls to "step in and end" anything for a sovereign country. Good luck trying to "step in" to China, Russia etc. Same for Israel. If you want to dissolve the military then you are welcome to go over there and give it a try.

[–] addys@lemmy.ninja -4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Laptops are not long-term investments. Hardware innovation makes them obsolete almost as fast as phones. Whenever some new OS security feature comes out that depends on BIOS or chip capabilities then you need to swap motherboards (and often memory) which is the bulk of cost. Or when a new USB format comes out. Or whatever is the "flavor of the month" improvement in GPUs, Bluetooth connectivity etc. The only scenarios in which extensibility really makes sense would be SSD size, maybe battery or RAM. But if it costs double then you would be better off buying a new laptop now and then another in a few years, instead of paying up front for in order to "maybe" be able to swap some of the components later...

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