@Galexyofthings@Mailanka23 No the product makes sense if the value proposition is the convenience. This is like arguing doordash doesn't make sense because you can pick the food up yourself. You're just arguing that society should be better and the premium entertainment machine seems like a weird focus.
@Galexyofthings@Mailanka23 Yeah man the people who should buy this aren't the same people that know how to assess the value of a used PC. IDK why that is so hard to understand. It's just not for you.
Everyone shocked about the appeal of the steam machine would lose their mind if they learned about the monitors/TVs of the people that will end up buying it.
@TaroTheCerelean You are exactly who should be buying this. Unless you're going into debt to buy it, or can easily afford something ~2k. Or have always wanted to learn how to build your own. But if none of those apply to you I feel like it's easily the right choice.
@MeyerRants@Thirteenthsteps Add the price of paying someone to build it for you. If that sounds stupid to you, it's just not a product for you. Which should be fine.
@scrumble_eggs A Seattle dog just means cream cheese, toasted bun, and grilled/caramelized onions. Jalapenos are a common add on. Never seen sriracha or cabbage.
@grimcity@scrumble_eggs And I've never seen cabbage or sriracha (well the Seattle got dog spots have every condiment ever for you to put on yourself so I'm sure they have sriracha but not the point).
@grimcity@scrumble_eggs Weirdly not really a Seattle dog.
Seattle dog is usually just cream cheese and grilled onions. Jalapenos optional (but definitely still count as Seattle dogs). Doesn't have to be a Bratwurst either (but again, still counts if it is. You can get a hot link Seattle).
@8xsOTWthrZ42873@mountainslmao I currently live in Seattle and love it but E ball: Lake Tahoe and some of the best CA coast (looks like it goes down to Pismo). Red woods. Mountains. Napa Valley wine country. Nevada desert and Casinos.