! GO GATORS! — Have you ever seen a whole bunch of news stories/reddit posts/videos or anything else about some topic and you had no idea what everyone was going on about? Did you feel out of the loop? This subreddit is dedicated to helping you get up to speed with the recent trends and news. Links to view before submitting -Rules 1.
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Post title must be a current, unbiased, and coherent question. The title is the most important aspect to creating a post. If it's hard for other users to understand what you are asking then it will be hard to get an answer. Current - The topic of the post you are creating must be a trending event that has happened recently. Unbiased - Don't put your own twist on it to make it come off negative or positive.
Try to be as neutral as possible. Coherent - Write a complete question that is clear about what you are trying to ask.
Don't simply put one word and a question mark. Format - 2. Post must include context and resources in the body of the text.
Context is key when trying to find a proper answer. The more we know about what you are asking, the better we can answer with more information. Context - Add some words to your post so there is more to work with than a title. Words such as; what you saw, where you saw it, how often you saw it. Resources - You obviously saw it somewhere; link to the thing that made you ask. Or include a screenshot. No ad nauseum, recently reposted, or retired questions.
Often times what you are asking has already been answered. Be sure to search the, and before creating a new post. Ad nauseum - The topic in question has been discussed extensively, and that those involved in the discussion have grown tired of it. Recently reposted - A topic is popular and is posted multiple times within a short period of time. Retired - The ' is a wiki page created by the mods that lists overly asked questions that have been thoroughly answered. Duplicates of retired questions may be removed.
Top-level comments must begin with 'Answer:', and be a genuine, unbiased, and coherent answer. People are here to find answers for their questions. If top-level comments are riddled with memes or non-answers then no one wins. Begin with 'Answer:' - This helps weed out low-effort, rule breaking comments, as well as allows the comments to be more organized. Genuine - Attempt to answer with words; don't pop in to tell users to search or drop a link without explanation. Unbiased - Answer without putting your own twist of bias towards the answer. However, after you leave an unbiased response, you can add your own opinion as long as it's clearly marked, starting with 'Biased:'.
Coherent - Write in complete sentences that are clear about what you are trying to say. Be nice, follow etiquette. This subreddit is supposed to be a helpful place for confused redditors. Be nice - Be polite in your exchanges, vote based on whether a comment contributes to the discussion and not on whether you agree with the opinion, etc.
Follow etiquette - When in doubt, refer to. Flairs + Filters Once you post a question and it's answered, please click the flair button under your post and change the flair to 'Answered'. You can also comment with the phrase answered to flair your post. Mod note Failure to follow these rules will result in posts or comments being removed, and may result in bans, the length of which to be determined by the nature of the infraction. Meta threads about OOTL itself should be asked via. Otherwise meta threads may be removed.
Tag spoilers: This(#s) will become Interesting subreddits. RELATED SUBS. SUGGESTED READING. My pet theory is as follows.
Software companies have an incentive in making their programs as widely distributed as possible in order to make them a de facto standard in their domain. When a certain program reaches a 'critical mass' — a universal presence in a given market — its use becomes almost mandatory because everyone knows how to use it. Training an entire staff to use some new, unproven tool is expensive and risky to some extent; the unknown quantity becomes a liability. Deadlines missed, low productivity, high employee turnaround and difficult recruitment are stuff businesses try to avoid as much as possible. Software companies are making their money on commercial licensing.
It's enforceable to some extent; shops need professional support and tools are deductible. Legit private licenses are like the cherry on the sundae as far as revenue is concerned. They are not giving it away easily: They all have DRM and/or remote activation lock-ins but the goal here is to prevent commercially-viable mass distribution, not to try to stop individual 'pirates' altogether (which would be impossible anyway). TL;DR: They expect companies to pay, not so much individuals.
There is more value in universality than whack-a-mole. After Adobe were called in front of a government enquiry and made to answer for price-gouging in Australia (it is literally cheaper to fly from Sydney to LA, purchase a thumb drive, download Adobe Premiere and fly back to Sydney then pay for the digital download in Australia) they responded that the local web experience made it worth the extra cost to Aussies. As in, Au forums hosted on adobe.com.au. I make it a point to pirate anything Adobe offer, and teach others how to also. Fuck those guys.