this post was submitted on 08 Feb 2026
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I was eating some chocolate when I imagined a world where Hershey's was widely accepted, even by elitists, as the best chocolate.

Is consumer elitism just a facade for pretentious contrarians? Or are there things where even most snobs agree with the masses?

Also, I mean that the product is intrinsically considered to be the best option. I'm not considering social products where the user network makes the experience.

Edit: I was not eating Hershey's. Hershey's being the best chocolate is a bizarro universe in this hypothetical.

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[–] CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Really? I would have thought that by the easy-to-deal-with metric, anything RISC would win.

[–] captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago (2 children)

It's not necessarily the instruction set, it's the platform architecture, the fact there's such a thing as a standard BIOS. You can run Windows, Linux, Haiku etc on practically any PC. There's Linux for ARM, why can't I run Raspberry Pi OS on my Galaxy S10e? It's because, though the instruction set is similar, the platforms very intentionally have nothing to do with each other.

[–] CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 21 hours ago* (last edited 20 hours ago) (1 children)

Interesting. What do ARM platforms have? BIOS and friends, as important as they are, always kind of come across as a precarious tower of baked-in technical debt.

(I know a Galaxy in particular uses a locked-down SoC you can't really touch in the first place)

ARM platforms have whatever the developer of that system that day came up with, same as literally everything except x86.

[–] jj4211@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago

Strangely enough, we do have Microsoft to thank for it. They didn't want to do the work to enable all that crap nor did they want to enable all the vendors to do their own thing, so they were adamant about standards and if you wanted Windows support, you had to follow standards.

Meanwhile on embedded every little vendor goes wild. In the server space. ARM has taken on a similar scope, but ARM embedded is a mess and ARM server chip makers keep changing as no one gets a foot hold.

[–] Brkdncr@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

From a users perspective everything runs on x86.