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I have a pretty high quality blu-ray, it's not just on legacy media.

EDIT: it occurs to me that "legacy media" means "not available through streaming/rental services/stores", my bad.


You could argue it's legacy media if you can pass it on to your descendants...


As always, legacy means "it makes money and it works and it has customers", as opposed to the new thing that may or may not work or make money.


lol. I sent that post and didn’t think twice about it, but of course you are right! I’ve started to think of physical media as “legacy”, but it is not of course!


> Quite often laws will issue punishments for some behaviors, but also issue things like funding for programs that work on the roots of why particular crimes occur.

That still requires enforcement. The existence of a law does not imply existence of enforcement, much less wide-spread enforcement (see e.g. wage theft, auto breakins, petty theft, etc).


Oh well if there's jail time, surely people will be dissuaded and follow the law.


So—beer was certainly the primary beverage, but people still drank water without boiling it (which is, after all, rather time and energy consuming and requires a ready fire).

I have ready links to provide better context, and this is literally the most hated question on /r/AskHistorians, so I'm sure you could get rapid replies for follow-up questions. It's an extremely useful resource to tap into to get a professional historian with training in historiography to weigh in on arbitrary questions.

On the general claim of using alcohol to decontaminate water: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/ol1h45/delet...

On use of aqueducts in Britain to transport potable water: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/mnlf9n/when_...

On general access to fresh water: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/1svj1q/how_d...

On understanding of germ theory in water: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/676bg6/befor...

On poisoning wells: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/6qljlt/when_...

2nd one on poisoning wells: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/6kt7nh/poiso...

Addressing beer directly: https://old.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/2bewpo/what_...


That wouldn't have been accessible via disk mode, though, so you can't write to it without first rooting it.


> The employment rate in the USA is usually somewhere around ~5% depending on what subset of the workforce you're looking at.

Well based on the number of friends I have that work multiple jobs and can't afford anything more than a room and basic necessities, that's not a very useful perspective.


Is that actually true though? Your friends don't have a smartphone with mobile internet, a computer, a TV, a fridge, a microwave, AC/heating, high speed internet, maybe a game console, a bounty of clothing, etc?

Because I think those aren't really necessities, yet the average person in the US has them. We're just quite spoiled in the 21st century, and many would argue (including clearly OP) that the reason for this abundance is (at least in part) free market capitalism.

People complain about needing to work to live, but that has always been the case. The difference is now you can work reasonable hours (40/week) doing a low-skill job and still have all those things.


> Because I think those aren't really necessities, yet the average person in the US has them. We're just quite spoiled in the 21st century, and many would argue (including clearly OP) that the reason for this abundance is (at least in part) free market capitalism.

If you want to consider that "spoiled" you're more than welcome to, but it doesn't change decades of increasing wealth inequality, nor the fact that we have no choice but to live in the 21st century.

> The difference is now you can work reasonable hours (40/week) doing a low-skill job and still have all those things.

My point is that that's no longer possible to achieve this with just 40 hours.


Wealth inequality is a red herring and a silly metric to consider in this conversation (and probably any conversation). Everything else the same, would you rather live in a world where the average person makes $100k/year and the richest person is worth $1T, or a world where you make $1k/year and the richest person $1M? Because if you're focusing on minimizing "wealth inequality", I guess you'd choose the latter, which is clearly the wrong choice.

Not sure I understand what you mean about "choosing" to live in the 21st century. Yes, you didn't choose the century, but lucky you, you got born into the one with more baseline access to material wealth for the average person than any other century before it. Sucks to be us, eh?

Your final point is objectively untrue. I don't know what your friends do but there are many (not highly-skilled) jobs that pay enough to easily afford all the listed things.


> Everything else the same, would you rather live in a world where the average person makes $100k/year and the richest person is worth $1T, or a world where you make $1k/year and the richest person $1M? Because if you're focusing on minimizing "wealth inequality", I guess you'd choose the latter, which is clearly the wrong choice.

It depends on the wealth curve, obviously, and how the rest of the market is structured. But in neither scenario are you going to see the problems of wealth inequality relaxed. Wealth inequality doesn't seem to offer society any benefit and creates the problem of poverty.


Wealth inequality, by definition, does not create poverty, unless your definition of poverty is "having less money than other people", which would be an absurd definition.


it literally does, how are you just blatantly changing the definition of words

you're just straight up lying now or just don't care about objective facts &/or reality


This pdf[0] shows an iPod can view notes, but says you need to store them as a .txt.

This O'Reilly snippet[1] claims the feature wasn't implemented until 2003, and even then explicitly states it could only store plain text.

EDIT: The Notes app on the touch can import html files, but that doesn't sync up with either rockbox or disk mode.

So I'm completely lost at what mechanic they're referring to. Even if we assume that this was a txt file and not html, that explicitly excludes the first gen iPod.

[0]: https://manuals.info.apple.com/MANUALS/0/MA282/en_US/iPod_cl...

[1]: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/ipod-and-itunes/0596008...


No, we have nice things in spite of money.


What is the point of this finding? How is swapping out optimistic financing for "cognitive ability" helping anyone?


Did you ever pause to think "is this comment worth posting"? Maybe you should.


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