vruz

joined 6 years ago
[–] vruz@mastodon.social 1 points 10 months ago

@xdydx @liverpoolfc@lemmy.ml @liverpoolfc@a.gup.pe

There's some rather unfair commentary in there, thrown in for balance:

"complained bitterly about 12.30pm kick-offs in a world where people were struggling to heat their houses"

Rather average sports journalism buying itself a little redemption.

[–] vruz@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@hallenbeck

And of course, you, the only very serious and objective person here knows for a fact that Liverpool and Jürgen Klopp haven't done that and will never do that.

The moment a discussion turns to what you know about what I believe and nothing else, that's the moment when you've just started making things up because you have no point whatsoever.

Thank you for the exchange and have a good weekend.

[–] vruz@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

@hallenbeck

I'm not seeing other clubs liking transparency and accuracy hard enough to back LFC's efforts and arrive to a fair resolution. If they did, it shouldn't have taken more than 24 hours to fix it.

The media being skeptical only have to look at the data to do some actual journalism for a change, and the fans of other clubs are irrelevant to the matter.

I'm not sure who are the "anyone" you're talking about other than the discerning section of #LFC supporters, and the club itself.

[–] vruz@mastodon.social 4 points 1 year ago (5 children)

@mlawton @hallenbeck@mastodon.online @football

It's too easy to dismiss any critique as a conspiracy without addressing the facts.

A conspiracy doesn't exist, but if somebody had created a conspiracy (a very sloppy one) it would look exactly like the facts everybody has witnessed.

If the logic is that no one is accountable and nothing has to change because a conspiracy didn't exist, that's not the great dismissal some think.

The facts are the facts, it doesn't matter if it was a conspiracy or not.

#LFC

[–] vruz@mastodon.social 1 points 1 year ago

@d3Xt3r @housepanther

One possible way forward would be to use the same standards of the PC, running an initialisation system like UEFI into an hypervisor, or a simple single-core x64 co-processor.

Of course, a lot more work would need to be done for that to be useful and reproducible across vendors, but at least you wouldn't be perpetually 40+ years behind the curve.