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Joined 2 months ago
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Cake day: March 4th, 2025

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  • Sure, they’re not designed solely for gaming. But they’re focused on graphical performance which is what makes them suited for gamers.

    Pop! Os has a focus on graphical performance, with versions containing preconfigured AMD/nvidia drivers depending on the users build. To claim that gaming hasn’t factored into the decision to focus on graphics would just be silly.

    Doesn’t really feel as though that pedantry has added anything to the conversation if I’m honest, as the question was what would be suitable for gaming, and you yourself also recommend 76?



  • It seems cheese just missed the mark for ultra status according to this specification I found on webMD.

    a quick summarisation is that there are 4 groups:

    1. Unprocessed or minimally processed foods (berries, nuts etc).
    2. Processed culinary ingredients (oils, butter, sugars etc).
    3. Processed foods (cheese, bread. Stuff with 2+ ingredients).
    4. Ultra-processed food and drink products (preservatives, additives, all the bad -ives).

    So I’m guessing a hot dog would be ultra processed due to preservatives and additives often found in the ‘meat’.

    That was an interesting rabbit hole to go down. Feels as though what is considered ultra-processed by the experts, is what us laymen tend to refer to as processed foods. I suppose technically their terminology is correct (the best kind of correct ofc), but it just feels like an exaggeration due to everyday usage of the term being what it is.

    Edit: formatting.





  • ‘Could’ specifies a possibility of an event occurring, as opposed to no possibility.

    For example, I could have rice for dinner, however there is no way I could jump to the moon.

    When applied to the context of this conversation:

    A person born in the 90s could have had their childhood affected by the recession in the 80s. A person born in the 50s could not have had their childhood affected by the recession in the 80s.

    Could is only vague in the scope of probability; this is because it’s a confirmation of the possibility, rather than a defined probability.