Based on the voting districts alone, those areas aren't the least populated in the state, but they're also definitely not cities.
Since those areas also don't have hiking trails unlike a huge swath of the state, I'm going guess the terrain along the coast there is not easily traverseable.
You were also an enjoyer of the clickbaity "money tree" back in the day? Each pixel was a link to something (it was ads, it was entirely ads), but you might could win $10,000 or so it claimed.
Also I was using a 14.4 modem well after 56k and dsl/broadband were introduced and available to everyday consumers. Every webpage took a few minutes to load in for me in those days. It wasn't until a bit after 2003 that I finally caught up with the times.. it's kind of amazing to think that my ping was manageable in Aliens vs Predator 2, and the first Call of Duty.
I feel obligated to point out that while the label fits, it shouldn't be a defining personality point.
People often get caught with labels they put there themselves or they were given by others. It's important to be separate enough from them that you are not constrained by them. If they care enough about finding a label to fit for now, I hope they will continue checking in with themselves on occasion to check if the label still fits.
Much like the feeling of 'if people are going to call me a villain, I might as well be a villain'. It happens (sometimes quite subtly) for most labels people choose to live by.
I would imagine that the replicators do make the exact same thing every time. The same texture, ripeness, distribution of toppings, etc. each and every time. So wanting the 'real' thing may be part placebo, and part wanting to experience the random imperfections of a natural product.
Could someone with enough time and effort make the replicator able to create slight variations on the food that wouldn't unintentionally poison people? Sure. However it seems like the replicator is used as a future MRE and that natural food is genuinely preferred by most people in that universe.
The first known things pirated looks to have been software at some point in the 70's.
Most music and video files were so large that actively sharing them back then wasn't feasible for most people, though I'm sure many made it work even in those slow times. I remember the days of watching images load in one pixel layer at a time.
Napster was the first real breakout application specifically for getting pirated media, but people were definitely sharing movies, music, and anything else digital over IRC well before Napster popped into existence.
I start out facing away while I test the water on my not so delicate skin until I acclimate, or make whatever adjustments needed. Then I alternate depending on where I'm washing. I tend to handle my hair last, which always leads to a cascade of shampoo and conditioner foam down in all the crevices which then need to be rinsed again.
If it wasn't something people sought it wouldn't be produced. I can't say I care at all about what people are into as long as it involves consenting adults. I don't know why anyone feels the need to attempt control over something they don't like if it's not harmful. And I don't perceive skewing societal norms in entertainment as harmful. Addiction is an entire other issue that doesn't pertain to this specific plot line.
The word necessary has a lot of wiggle room here. What are necessities? Going by the bare minimum:
food
water
protection from the elements
protection from illness/infection
continuation of the species
That's about everything we truly 'need' to die of old age and not go extinct. Nearly everything people currently do is a subset of those needs. Space exploration can be marked under both protection from the elements and continuation of the species.
Xsplit is a video mixer, which has been kind of shut out by the free and accessible OBS that most streamers use these days. I haven't looked in on it in so long that I have no idea what they could possibly be bringing to the table for their subscription based service that the free options aren't already doing.
Ymmv on that one. I still get random cravings, 5 years after completely quitting. I still occasionally smoke in dreams. It latched on to me extra hard.
I loved the first one, and it felt like they really hit their stride by the time they finished up all the dlc.. And then the second one came out, and while some aspects (bosses, story) were overall better, nearly every other metric I cared about either stagnated for declined. It served as an alert that the devs weren't interested in the same things I am and got me to boycott gearbox for a decent chunk of time. I eventually decided to try them out again once they had a massive bundle and discount on most of their borderlands games, as well as the tell tale games.
After playing through 3 and some of the dlcs, it feels like they're just going through the motions at this point. It might as well be a more cartoony call of duty.
I will continue to wait for deep sales on the full products if I feel like they're worth my time.
I'm glad I understood after going through a good amount of schooling and having crap retail jobs that an office job was not right for me. While I believe I missed the mark slightly with construction carpenter. I'm pretty happy with my day to day.
Based on the voting districts alone, those areas aren't the least populated in the state, but they're also definitely not cities.
Since those areas also don't have hiking trails unlike a huge swath of the state, I'm going guess the terrain along the coast there is not easily traverseable.