So what? You are just pointlessly arguing about termiology here. The "friends list" on a console is exactly for the type of relationships that you described, it's an euphemism for online acquaintances and fans and communities. It isn't just for letting your significant loved ones on it, but for all these vague online connections.IamLEAM1983 said:It's a fair point on a technical perspective, but I wonder: why are we allowed a hundred "friends" to begin with? I'm lucky to have six ACTUAL friends on my Steam list! Not, you know, "I met you online and you didn't suck at TF2 and you didn't act like a douchebag, so you get friended" material - ACTUAL friends.
People I talk to every single day. People I've worked with. Family members, in some cases, even. SIGNIFICANT people.
you do realize that by basing the forefront of the argument on a what many would consider to be a non issue then it is more likely to be struck with a massive reducto-ad-absurdum targeting your base pillar, and thereby making the entire point just seem absurd. If you were to have started off by mentioning the part about Hulu, Netflix and used that as the base of your argument, and then moved on to discussing the friends list thing. Then it would have been less likely for such attacks to be as pervasive. but were it felt that the rest/majority of your poinient are argument was more or less in passing, and the limitation of the friends list seemed to be the core it feels like it is the only point being stated.Jimothy Sterling said:Remember, I addressed the "pettiness" of the complaint in the video. This isn't just about friend lists -- the friends thing is merely the baseline example of how formulaic and outdated game companies are allowing themselves to be. Those complaining that this video is "just" about friend lists are kind of missing the clearly stated point.
I feel that your not being quite honest about this being a small and trivial issue Jim. For most everyone using these service it's not an issue and for many not having the ability to add more then 100 friends will never matter. However for people like yourself, someone who has a brand and markets themselves by having "friends" it's an issue that you have to feel bad that you can't add them all thus expanding your brand like as if you know and care for these "friends." That might skew your view a bit on this issue as it would me, but the idea that they are not innovating because they have put a cap on something as arbitrary as the number of friends sounds like a stretch. The "Innovation" issue you brought up is interesting, and I agree that some of the apps really suck on Xbox, but I would rather the game industry focus on innovation in gaming. I don't need a set top box that does it all. Like you said your TV does it better with the installed apps. There is all this new technology and peripherals and not one developer really knows how to implement them. Like motion control. More often they take me out of the game while the simple and tradition joystick is easy to use and never once made me think I wasn't Lara Croft while tomb raiding.Jimothy Sterling said:If you have that many friends, maybe you're popular enough that the 10,000 would like to keep up with YOU. In my case, maybe I won't have a close relationship with everyone on my list, but I still feel bad that I can't add them all. It's not nice having to reject requests, and I think anybody who ends up joining big communities online will feel the same way.canadamus_prime said:Ok I have to ask, if you could have 10,000 friends how many of those would you actually keep up with? I mean really? Like maybe 10. 20 at most. I'm surprised if you keep up with all 100 that you've got. Having more "friends" is mostly for bragging rights, it's not as though you keep in touch with all of them or even most of them.
Because God forbid we touch on a tangential subject, right? *sighs*Entitled said:So what? You are just pointlessly arguing about terminology here. The "friends list" on a console is exactly for the type of relationships that you described, it's an euphemism for online acquaintances and fans and communities. It isn't just for letting your significant loved ones on it, but for all these vague online connections.IamLEAM1983 said:Blah blah!
So yeah, technically that might not fit the traditional definition of friendship, maybe calling it "peers list" or "partners list" would be more linguistically accurate, but your comment pointing that out adds nothing to the discussion of why such a list is arbitrarily limited.
I like to think I have a greater respect for the reasoning capabilities of most of my viewers than that.gardian06 said:you do realize that by basing the forefront of the argument on a what many would consider to be a non issue then it is more likely to be struck with a massive reducto-ad-absurdum targeting your base pillar, and thereby making the entire point just seem absurd. If you were to have started off by mentioning the part about Hulu, Netflix and used that as the base of your argument, and then moved on to discussing the friends list thing. Then it would have been less likely for such attacks to be as pervasive. but were it felt that the rest/majority of your poinient are argument was more or less in passing, and the limitation of the friends list seemed to be the core it feels like it is the only point being stated.Jimothy Sterling said:Remember, I addressed the "pettiness" of the complaint in the video. This isn't just about friend lists -- the friends thing is merely the baseline example of how formulaic and outdated game companies are allowing themselves to be. Those complaining that this video is "just" about friend lists are kind of missing the clearly stated point.
That's a good point, actually. Imagine if user groups did have a 100 member limit. There would likely be outrage on this website, even though I'm relatively sure that there aren't an overabundance of groups that surpass 100 members (for instance, The Brovengers are currently only at 87 and many of them haven't even visited the actual chat in months).Caramel Frappe said:However I actually can see why this is a problem for Jim. Imagine if Groups on here only had a 100 member limit. Groups like mine (Hot Topic Escapists), the Badge Hunter Group, the My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic Group, and so forth would not have room for the 500-600 members trying to fill in. They would feel left out thus despite having ways of being subscribed .. it's just not the same as being a full on member. Why is the limit 100? It could extend, and no charge required just rank up the numbers.
My thoughts exactly. I have no issue with it allowing more, but how often would people interact with even half of them.aceman67 said:To all the people who complain that you can't add more then 100 people to your friends list, I gotta ask:
Do you play with even half of them regularly? A third of them?
Baring any far extreme examples, I'm going to say, most decidedly no. You do not. So weed out the ones who haven't been online in a few weeks/months, because really, its quite an idiotic thing to complain about.