I'm a very nuts-and-bolts kinda guy and this morning I'm struck VIVIDLY by just how weird that is

Like I read so many threads on here that go, like,

🐰 I have a problem affecting me
πŸ¦†πŸ‡πŸ΄πŸ’πŸ€ 40 post discussion
🐹 The actual problem is capitalism AND THAT'S THE END OF THE THREAD

And like, 🐹 isn't even wrong, the root of the problem often is capitalism (or, if you want to talk about problems like this to normal people, you can just say "greed"), but I've seen this said about the wildest fucking things and as soon as it's brought up it's like a safety valve for deflating any enthusiasm or action towards actually fixing this specific problem

I've seen shit play out on here like

🦝 This author's ebooks aren't compatible with my ereader
🐹 To fix this problem we must first dismantle capitalism

🐴 Geez, the battery in this thing sure doesn't last as long as it used to
🐹 My friend, what you're observing there is called "Planned Obsolescence," one of many ways in which capitalism grinds us all down. Writing to your elected official won't solve the problem because your elected officials are PART of the problem; the only long-term solution is a radical restructuring of society from the ground up
🐴 so... like, are the replacement batteries from eBay any good, or

When I started work at PAPA, the games were in pretty bad condition.

PAPA had one tech, and five hundred pinball machines. Tech's name was Steve and he was a great guy and an excellent tech. You've never heard of him because he's kind of a hermit and doesn't go on the internet, but he's genuinely one of the best and most knowledgeable pinball techs in the world. The games were in generally poor condition because there were five hundred of the damn things and one tech and no matter how good the tech is, the maths just doesn't work out, so PAPA hired me. With one guy they got slowly worse over the course of years, with two guys they got slowly better over the course of years.

Five hundred filthy pinball machines, every one of them with some problem or another, and two techs. Plus Ted, but his thing was vids, the pins were left to me and Steve.

You ever seen five hundred pinball machines? If you're there to play them you think "Wow cool," if you're there to fix them then the scale is incomprehensible. The brain rebels against this problem, it says you are so small. You are one person. This is impossible.

It's the same feeling that you get the first time you ever open a pinball machine. You look inside and the brain says look at all those wires. Look at the relays and motors and coils and bulbs. Look at all that complexity. Look at all the rat shit. This is impossible.

Sometimes the brain needs to shut up and wait its turn. Be quiet, brain, you can speak again when I've got a schematic up, until then you can sit in the corner and chew on a podcast because it's the hands' turn now. Without something to gnaw, the brain will only keep reminding you of the sheer scale of insurmountable Task To Be Done.

Alright, let's back up. Until the late 70's, electrically speaking, every pinball machine was made of four things: coils, switches, wire and connectors. This is a reductive take, but you NEED reductive takes in order to fit the world into your head enough to actually do something about it. A transformer? Two coils wrapped around an iron frame. A motor? Coils again but in a circle. Lightbulb? Coil, in a glass prison with no air. A coil is just wire that goes round and round, I guess you could say "Switches, wire and connectors" but that would be TOO reductive. Here's how reductive you need to be, to fix a pinball machine:

If every coil works,

and every switch works,

and every wire is where it should be,

and every connector works,

then the machine has NO CHOICE

BUT

TO

WORK

You fix the system, by fixing all parts of the system, one part at a time, over a long time. There is no "big picture" here. The big picture is what you see when you can't focus on the nuts and bolts. If every part of it works, then it works, and all a person can actually affect is parts.

Take the single machine, and abstract it out into five hundred machines. We worked in two modes, panic-fixing and long-term improvement; around tournament seasons we'd find all the hand-written out-of-order signs and do as many quick on-the-spot fixes as we could, and outside of tournament times we'd pick the worst game, make it the best, and repeat. A helper once asked me while we were in long-termer mode, are you two really gonna fix ALL these machines like this, taking days over each one? I said well, at this rate, it'll take about five years. It did. There were three non-working pinballs when COVID killed PAPA, and every game was clean. We just, Kept Going, turning one screw at a time.

A manager once asked me, you're so nuts-and-bolts, what do you think is the big picture here - I told her, there's no big picture. The big picture is made out of thousands of interlocking nuts and bolts that all affect each other. We have a thousand machines (by then we'd added five hundred vids too) and each machine is a thousand parts and it's been a long time since any were simple enough that you could hold the whole schematic in your head.

When someone says to me, "The problem is capitalism," I remember all the times I'd be working on a game and someone would be standing around chatting with me and said something that boiled down to "Wow, that's a LOT of games, how the hell are you gonna fix all those," while I had the playfield up and my filthy scratched-up hands

turning

one

screw

Bitch at me about the above take after opening that CW and you're getting deadDoveDoNotEat.jpg
Squeaking 🐹 "There should never have been an elephant in the first place" to a room full of folk who can't talk back because their mouths are full of elephant
This is about capitalism
20.4%
This is about climate change
3.4%
This is about organizing
20.4%
This is about drama at the furry con
55.8%
Poll ended at .

Taught some pinball repair classes a few times. During tournaments we'd bring in techs from all over, but we RAN OUT AND HAD TO GROW OUR OWN, so I started off with coils and power supplies and how-the-hell-do-an-electron-go, y'know, the fundamentals.

Did a quick bit on bridge rectifiers and smoothing caps and coil drive transistors and then held up one of these lads and said right let's fix one of these and everyone, all these pinball teching newbies, took this Indrawn Breath because HOLY SHIT JUST LOOK AT IT, you mean we gotta UNDERSTAND that?

I said don't worry. The biggest, most complicated, most intimidating system you can think of, is made out of smaller, simpler systems, and then those systems are themselves made out of even smaller, simpler systems, until you get right down to stuff that's very understandable and very fixable by the average person, and if all the little easy bits work then the big complicated thing has no choice but to work.

I'm posting this now because someone just called that post "philosophy" and it's not philosophy it's just literally how pinball machines work lol

oh shit wait that's not a WPC driver board, it's a WPC-95

You can all go home lol, I clearly have no idea what I'm going on about

(it's had a time of it and all, check out the bottom-left)

The most immediately noticeable difference between WPC and WPC-95 driver boards is that Williams separated out the one-big-square-chunk bridge rectifiers into four discrete big ol' diodes. A bridge rectifier converts AC to pulsed DC and it's made out of four diodes. So Williams just took the diodes out of the packaging so you could see, understand, test and repair them more easily.

...

...

...*Alexei Sayle voice* which I suppose makes them radical leftist revolutionaries

@ifixcoinops

I had to re-read, and then re-read that again because I'm so used to businesses changing electronics to make later things less serviceable and so they can stick the words "NEW AND IMPROVED" (or similar) on the packaging.

@barcode @ifixcoinops WMS went out of business before enshittification really took over, but don't worry, Stern and Jersey Jack have integrated everything into a DRM-locked unrepairable surface-mount board that spies on you.
@ieure @barcode these days I do the odd day here and there at a local arcade full of new Sterns, all with the Insider Connected thing, all connected to the internet. One of these days someone's gonna walk in, straight past the counter and the change machine, put their phone on the glass, and it'll start right up. The owner will get an email telling him he's got 75 cents in his new SternCash account. The player will bitch at him about the price per play going up to a buck fifty. My job will become writing pirate code for post-2020 pinball machines.
@ifixcoinops @barcode I know several people at Scorbit, which directly competes with Insider Connected, and what they have to do in order to make their stuff work / the quiet arms race between Stern locking them out and them finding a new way in is.... really something.
@ifixcoinops this is how our Sim Racing Venue Management System already works when it's running in Kiosk mode πŸ˜€
@ifixcoinops
Thanks for the Alexei Sayle shout out. I’ve only seen ONE bit from him (way back in the β€˜80s), but it was memorable.
@kelvin0mql check out his recent radio show Alexei Sayle's Imaginary Sandwich Bar. It's on Dimsdale

@ifixcoinops
Alexei, walking in a pub, holding a pint: "My friends sometimes ask me, 'Alexei, why are you drunk all the time?' And I tell them, 'Simple; I can afford to be.'"

I don't know what a Dimsdale is. But I'll do some searching on the apps/services I know about.

@kelvin0mql dimsdale.co.uk, it's like BBC podcasts before the BBC fucked themselves up with that Sounds app
@ifixcoinops Eeek! That's been a bit warm. And probably let some magic smoke out.
@ifixcoinops
WPC is a strict subset of WPC-95 (it's the first 3 letters!) so you're all good. ;-)
@ifixcoinops Zen and the Art of Pinball Maintenance

@ifixcoinops it can be philosophy too!

It's basically what Zen And The Art Of Motorcycle Maintenance spends 300 odd pages waffling on about

@reb @ifixcoinops wait a minute... there's no small engine repair information at all in here!
@tezoatlipoca @ifixcoinops oh but there is! Using the information in the book you can diagnose any machine, and small engines are within the class of machines!
@reb @tezoatlipoca counterpoint, I'm bloody shite with small engines
@ifixcoinops @tezoatlipoca are you? Or is every small engine from the last 40 years engineered to have just enough life to last long enough to keep the original owner happy?
@reb @tezoatlipoca 🐹 I TOLD YOU THE PROBLEM WAS CAPITALISM
@ifixcoinops @tezoatlipoca ah but communism would have just as much incentive to keep factories churning out temporary engines to ensure work for the workers
@reb @ifixcoinops look, guys all I want to do is adjust my valve timing.
@tezoatlipoca @ifixcoinops shim it with a section of beer can and have a dream about being trapped behind soundproof glass? I don't know!
@reb @tezoatlipoca the valves will adjust themselves comrade, just wait for the revolution
@ifixcoinops @tezoatlipoca my preference for adjusting valves is to tip three bottles of redex in the tank and give it an Italian tune up, and by italian tune up I mean redline it until it either settles down or fires a valve through the head
@ifixcoinops @reb well, will the revolution be done by 4, I have to buy groceries.
@tezoatlipoca @ifixcoinops sorry, after the revolution you'll have to grow your own food because agriculture is a tool of the oppressor

@reb @ifixcoinops oh man. Again!?

Sorry kids, its earthworms and small rocks again. Lillibet, go pluck this dead pigeon I found on the road and give it to mama for the pot. Bread is a weapon of the bourgeoisie.

@reb @ifixcoinops

<skeptical face> I can't tell if you're joking or not. Or whether the motorcycles were us all along.

@ifixcoinops that person is a bad philosopher because what you're describing is clearly praxis. More directly: hell yeah! None of us can fix everything, but all of us can fix *something* to make the world a slightly better place. You teaching others how to do repairs means planting the seeds for a crop of new repair folks.
@ifixcoinops looking at all those transistors in radio-brain-mode, going 'final.final.final.final...'

@ifixcoinops yes, but very few systems are like that. You have 4 types of components, and they behave not only consistently, but simply. But we cannot explain our brains' capacity from the neurons that compose them, and many complex system behave at a macro level erratically unless well constrained on what they can do or their speed, including humans, groups of humans, companies, societies, worlds (ok, only one), etc.

1/

@ifixcoinops

I wish we could get to the point where we can explain everything from first principles, but see quantum physics and the amount of power we spend just to get a stochastic parrot, and not even a fly yet.

/end

@ifixcoinops

Where is "all of the above"?

@ifixcoinops

I searched "dead dove do not eat" and it made me laugh out loud.

@ifixcoinops

. it just happened again ..

@ifixcoinops I like and agree with your take, but I also want to see deadDoveDoNotEat.jpg
Dead Dove: Do Not Eat | Know Your Meme

Dead Dove: Do Not Eat is a slang term primarily used as a tag on fanfiction websites, such as Archive of Our Own, and is used to indicate that pieces with

Know Your Meme
@ifixcoinops I don't know what I expected.
@ifixcoinops NGL that's.. The best take I've read on the whole thing. Like you said, mouse isn't wrong. But we all KNOW capitalism is the problem. Great job, mouse; You know the answer everyone else does. Now, how about a solution that can actually be accomplished as opposed to sixty MORE mammoth tasks?
@Nine how about sixty thousand smaller, more manageable tasks
@ifixcoinops ...i mean, logically those would be good... but... holy shit that's a lot still
@Nine it's ok, just do two or three every day forever, maybe get a friend to help
@ifixcoinops @Nine 🐹 "But 60,000 small things takes a LONG time to fix and I want to see change NOW! I don't want to do small changes and be dead before I would be able to see results!"
@ifixcoinops @Nine very same principle applies to bigger machines too. (ref Farmcraft101 on youtube) Jon got an excavator that eventually earned the name Large Marge. Start off with the show-stopper problems, but any one of those is understandable in isolation: Turbo and diesel injector pump needed rework. Now it runs. but it tracks bad. That's a big job, made of smaller jobs. Continue chasing smaller and smaller problems until you have a standup, operational, and enjoyable-to-use machine that doesn't leak on the ground where it's parked.
@ifixcoinops @Nine it's all too easy to get caught up in the idea of "All you have to fix is Everything" - no, find something that will immediately improve things, and fix that. Then do it again.
@ifixcoinops Classic "perfect is the enemy of good enough" thinking.
@ifixcoinops It is very much a "perfect is the enemy of the good" situation.
@ajroach42 @ifixcoinops Yeah like I'm all for ending capitalism but there's gotta be a feasible middle ground between "I will not live to see this comparatively minor problem fixed" and "achieve worker's paradise tomorrow." It also feels like oblique scolding, as in "THAT'S what you're worried about when capitalism is destroying the planet??"
@ifixcoinops clearly it needs to be replaced with a Coin-Op Co-op
@ifixcoinops But what if dismantling capitalism started by doing radically rebellious actions such as modifying an ebook to make it compatible with your ereader? 
@finalstaticfox @ifixcoinops
That sounds like a valid starting point to me. πŸ“š