Correct.
Correct.
It’s hard to care about people who develop games to encourage and monetize on gambling addictions.
That’s the point that’s being made.
I think you might need to clear your cache.
A few months ago I was tasked with translating a script from one IBM emulator program to another because the owners of the first program wouldn’t respond to requests to purchase a new license.
The scripting language used on both was unique to the software, and the documentation was basically non-existent. Plus, the script was written over a decade ago, and the guy who wrote it was long gone.
For weeks I banged my head against the wall trying to figure out the logic flow before I realized that it was essentially BASIC, which I haven’t touched in over 20 years.
Or we could all just move to nano and be less frustrated.
And like the other 10 companies that own pretty much every brand in the country.
You’re making the mistake of thinking that people who care about what the admins did are the majority of reddit users.
I’d give it a month, maybe 6 weeks, until everything is back to normal.
Yeah, tanking your valuation is the exact opposite of you want to do before going public. Not to mention that AFAIK pre-ipo stock buying isn’t a thing.
It truly was humorous to hear people with absolutely no business education talk so confidently about how big of a mistake the execs made. As if people with advanced degrees in business and years of experience didn’t know exactly what they were doing.
They knew they’d lose a few million subscribers, but they also knew the people they’re losing were people that they weren’t going to profit off of.
I also had a chuckle at people thinking that the current mod teams were the only people in the world who would be willing to exert control over millions of people for free.
The reason those games are so popular is that they’re inherently exploitative. I have no issues with predatory app developers being priced out of business.