Who says we are playing them?Moragauth wrote:Don't play Ubi's games if you do not like their corporate strategy tbfh.
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Who says we are playing them?Moragauth wrote:Don't play Ubi's games if you do not like their corporate strategy tbfh.
Moragauth wrote:I love how environmentalists act oh so offended when the "green" philosophy is used, as it always is, as a marketting or political gimmick - a philosophy largely funded by political lobbyists and such concerns to begin with. Please, wake up.
Edited on Wed, Jun 09 2010, 10:58 by Moragauth
Yeah man, we should totally only be offended by stuff no one is lobbying for... so basically nothing...Moragauth wrote:>>>I love how environmentalists act oh so offended when the "green" philosophy is used, as it always is, as a marketting or political gimmick - a philosophy largely funded by political lobbyists and such concerns to begin with. Please, wake up.<<<
Economy lesson #1375:HellSpawn wrote:Who needs paper manuals when you can get a *.PDF file online?
Not to mention that most manuals that come with games, are printed on glossy paper, which is horribly expensive.
If you really want the manual, just google it if you can't find it on the actual website.
Once you find the manual, decide whether or not, you wish to print it out.
Uhh, no. Double-click on D:\, double-click on Manuals, double-click on the .pdf file.LocutusBorg wrote:4. You are wasting your time and efford for searching a manual/print it. (which you could spent f.e. on a game)
Try obtaining a bookshelf to keep your manuals safe and in order.GreatEmerald wrote:Uhh, no. Double-click on D:\, double-click on Manuals, double-click on the .pdf file.LocutusBorg wrote:4. You are wasting your time and effort for searching a manual/print it. (which you could spent f.e. on a game)
Or even better, click on Start, click on Ubisoft, click on your game title, click on Manual.pdf. Personally that's a whole lot faster than getting off my chair, finding where the devil I put the game's box (remembering to check all the trash bins just in case), finding the manual through all the other things that is in the box, taking it back to the PC and opening it.
I could say the same to you - try obtaining a good printer and a paper clip. The quality will be just as good and the papers won't fly away.HodgePodge wrote:Try obtaining a bookshelf to keep your manuals safe and in order.Personally, I keep my manuals on the shelf underneath my computer desk, very convenient.
I like having a real manual to look stuff up when I'm playing a game; manuals printed from the .pdf file are of inferior quality and the loose pages are much more likely to be lost or out of order. So I for one, am not happy about the trend away from concise, hard-copy manuals which used to come with games.
Not sure what you could say the same, but the fact is the commercially prepared manuals were usually far nicer than you can get from the typical home printer and in the quantity the game manufacturer produced them it would be far cheaper for them than us. Regardless whether it could be done as nicely or cheaply at home, the rub is it was a business decision about delivering less and keeping the price the same which they are trying to hide behind an insincere mask of going green. It is however the way of things, if you could see the size of the candy bars I use to get for 5 cents when I was a kid ‘ahem’.GreatEmerald wrote:I could say the same to you - try obtaining a good printer and a paper clip. The quality will be just as good and the papers won't fly away.
Surely electricity is far worse for the environment than most things, because to produce it you have to burn awesome amounts of fuel, unless you are using renewable electricity which unfortunately is not so.GreatEmerald wrote:Electricity is far better for the environment since power plants can be easily controlled. Install a better filter and you'll immediately get results. Compare that to, say, cars - you can do the same, but it's a whole lot more expensive and you need to do the procedure thousands of times to get the same impact.
We would live in a land covered in trees if we didn't keep on clearing the land for agriculture and ensuring that the trees can't regrow safely (like with grazing animals etc) and destroying the top-soil with mining/erosion.GreatEmerald wrote:You're speaking about coal power plants, and they are fairly old now. Coal overall is not a very good power source - it's relatively expensive and gives really small amount of power. At least in Europe, most power is generated by nuclear plants. With them, you only need to worry about the waste and cooling, but nothing that impacts the environment directly. Of course, using geothermal, photovoltaic or, ultimately, fusion power would be a whole lot better, but we're still quite a long way from there, unfortunately...
And trees don't just regrow that easily. If they would, we would be living in land covered with trees from start to finish, like it was before humans started terraforming. So while they can regrow, they are cut faster. So on one hand we have the air pollution problem that makes air toxic to breathe, but on the other hand we have a problem of not having oxygen at all.
That's called surface mining...You cannot mine a place without not only clearing it of trees but destroying the top-soil as well.
Once you have made a place look like the moon (or Heroes III rock terrain) by mining, only a lot of time (or a lot of expense and a bit less time) can restore it to it's former state.
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