this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2026
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[–] Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com 47 points 14 hours ago (2 children)

It's their walled garden, which they control and were they get to do whatever the fuck they want.

Never, ever jump into a tech stack which is a walled garden, because sooner or later you're almost certainly going to get shafted by those who control it. This applies just as much as a tech consumer as it does as a tech professional.

[–] haxboar@hexbear.net 10 points 12 hours ago (2 children)

The amount of companies that I've seen dive face-first into walled gardens because "they wouldn't screw us over, we're paying customers!" is mindblowing.

2 years later, and those same CHUDs have shocked-pikachu and are yelling at me because prices have gone through the roof, and there's no way to get out of the stack without a complete redesign.

How do the idiots that make these decisions keep failing upwards?

[–] heartSagan5@lemmy.zip -1 points 3 hours ago

Must be white men… lol?

[–] Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

In most countries Management is not Meritocratic - people whose job is Organizing, Tactical Planning and even Strategical Planning are in practice selected on Networking (the social kind, not the tech kind), Social and Image Management skills as well as Knowing The Right People (which often is Coming From Well Off Families And Attending The Right Posh Schools) instead of concrete metrics on the skills they're supposed to have and apply on the job.

Since performance measuring in that domain is often pretty nebulous (especially in IT), it's a lot easier to get away with being mediocre at the job than it is in more strictly measurable domains where results are clearly PASS/FAIL.

So you get tons of Shoot From The Hip, Make It Up As You Go and generally insufficient problem space analysis, none of which conducing to reliable, sustained and robust outcomes. Since generally the management pyramid is people like that all the way up, the higher ups just see the inevitable problems that emerge later as "just the way things are" because they themselves did the exact same thing, and often even promote such people because they're like them:

The

  • Some manager does insufficient upfront analysis and preparation, and then, when things needlessly blow up because of that, in a "superhuman effort" "saves the day" by avoiding catastrophe, hence is seen as a hero and gets promoted.

is very common exactly because upper level management themselves work in the same way and are thus unable to spot the causal relationship between not doing something they themselves don't do and the later crisis when a "unknown unknown" that should've been a "know unknown" for which there was already some defensive planning turns into a near catastrophe for which in their eyes "nobody could have seen coming" is a valid justification.

Mind you, this actually varies quiet a bit from country to country as the overall management culture is not the same - in my own professional experience it's not at all the same thing in Northern Europe and Scandinavia as it is in Western Europe and Anglo-Saxon countries and in turn between those and Southern Europe and Latin America.

[–] laz@pawb.social 12 points 13 hours ago (3 children)

While I agree, the average person doesn't consider things like this (even though they should), and we should avoid getting close to victim blaming.

[–] p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 7 hours ago (2 children)

We've tried to educate, but the general public is just so fucking stupid and won't learn any lessons at all. How many pre-orders does it take before they realize it's a scam? Fuck, there are still idiots that buy the latest FIFA game at full price every single year.

It's not even victim blaming when they repeatedly don't learn they are being shafted over and over again.

[–] laz@pawb.social 3 points 7 hours ago

I agree but it's not even a point of education (for the most part) imo. It's that a large amount of people are easily manipulated and are not properly equipped to fight it off.

Societal peer pressure carries a lot of this stuff very far. If two friends but the latest game, a third will likely do so as well; and the sample size is rarely limited to three.

[–] dil@lemmy.zip 0 points 6 hours ago (1 children)

General public is tired, mfs working minimum wage and want some joy out of their paycheck, they want to play the lastest sports game with their friends, doesn't appeal to me but ik plenty of power users who still buy those games and play them too actually, honestly its not even expensive if you work and actually play those games all year every year?

[–] dil@lemmy.zip 1 points 5 hours ago

They charge what they want because the general public still likes it and cares enough to support it every year, they still get more than enough value out of it, blame the lack of comeptitors and ppl being hung up on needing licensing

[–] Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 points 13 hours ago

The first part it is indeed true.

For the second part it really depends: one thing is a technologically naive person who gets themselves into such a situation because of not knowing better, a whole different thing is somebody who should know better but still go in because of convenience and hoping for the best.

In my eyes the former are victims, but not the latter, so I'll definitely blame the latter for jumping in with some awareness of the risks thinking "I will probably be alright" - if you jumped in the pool were you knew there was a shark and got bitten that's on you.

I also definitely blame fanboys, because their actions help pull in more of the first kind - when one is too ignorant about the broader implications of a choice, they shouldn't be actively be trying to get other people to make that choice.

[–] TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.zip 1 points 13 hours ago

Should they? I mean if they don't consider it, is honestly because they don't care. And if they are happy paying full price on the PSStore let them.