• 0 Posts
  • 5 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 10th, 2023

help-circle

  • Maybe. But multiplayer games exist. And people have a very high standard for what population a game must have for it to be worth playing. People will consolidate into singular pre-made titles, compromising on their desires like they do now, in order to have many other humans to play with.

    Maybe AI can be convincing NPCs eventually, but people will want to play games with their friends. They’ll find out eventually if another character is an NPC or human, and they will care.

    Even singleplayer games will be subject to this, to a degree. People enjoy playing what their friends play - they like having the same experiences, they like having something in common to discuss, they like the shared experience that brings a sense of community to the fans of a single title or series.

    Sure, people could make any game they desire, but it will be isolating. You’re underselling the social desires and needs we all have. Maybe we’ll end up with something similar to Garry’s Mod and Roblox: connected gaming hubs where people can load up any number of experiences - but still being able to include their friends somehow. I think that is much more likely than the concept of a person sitting in the corner of a room with their VR headset, wilting away in a world of their own creation, having lost all connections that would otherwise surround them. Humans naturally fight against that. We’ll experience things we’re not familiar with, as long as we’re experiencing them with other people.



  • You have read these charts wrong. The 17B figure is 12-month trailing gross profit. You are referencing quarterly net income (and you’ve also made a typo, saying 406 thousand instead of 406 million). If you want to compare the “per resident” calculation (which I don’t even see the point of), make your units match. Trailing 12-month net income is 1.944B, so more like $50 per person.

    Now to make the “per resident” metric actually have any meaning:
    First, if we’re talking yearly profit skimming off of a utility, our goal is to estimate overcharges per billing address. Census data reports about 38.9 million residents and an average family size of 2.92 - but that’s not enough, because PG&E doesn’t serve the entire state. They serve about two thirds of the state - taking this into account, a very rough estimate (because population isn’t evenly spread across a state) is that they service 8.7 million households. Thankfully for us, they directly report how many households they serve, and the actual number is about 5.2 million.

    $374. The average yearly bill for a PG&E customer is $374 pure profit for the company. Now that’s a more useful metric.

    Oh, and that’s assuming none of their operating expenses are inflated - which they likely are. So that’s a lower bound for how much they’re ripping off each household.


  • That was a >100gb download that took the moderators time to download and test. And the admins weren’t involved. All the claims of admins backing the torrent or deleting comments has had zero proof, as it was all hysteria drummed up by the psychotic cracker called Empress, who has had a long standing imaginary feud with 1337x.

    1337x can have malware in anything, as anyone can upload. The volunteer moderators downloaded and tested it as soon as they could. I’m sorry some people downloaded it faster, but there’s no conspiracy here.