Lol or not.Who'da thunk db0 wouldn't be able to resist projecting more smug privilege despite pretending to want to stop.
He's 100% correct, and his point was to demonstrate that you were wrong. Which you were.Hope that helps!
That's fine, all I'm saying is it's not like it's significantly more expensive or out of line price-wise historically.More to the point, the article wasn't talking about launch prices of consoles at all.
I mean, historically it seems pretty in-line with Nintendo releases, adjusted for inflation:NES: $582SNES: $480N64: $410GCN: $362Wii: $399WiiU: $419Switch 1: $396Switch 2: $449It's only ~$50 more than the Switch 1, and they just raised the price of the Switch 1 by $50.
Just ripped through all 3 seasons of The Traitors. Come for the deception and backstabbing, stay for Alan Cumming's incredible outfits.
Of course retail daytraders don't stand a chance against firms who do this for a living. Nor did anyone say that predictions are 100% accurate.Doesn't change the fact that predicting changes in the markets based on previous trends is nothing like Astrology.
The last loop I'm trying to close is notifications for new releases from artists I subscribe to.I found this, but it has no documentation so I haven't tried it yet: https://github.com/provokateurin/musicbrainz-rss-generatorEdit: Nevermind, I somehow missed the Explore page in ListenBrainz that does this automatically (and has its own RSS feed).
This is the way