Physical media FTW. I wish it was easier to obtain movies and shows physically. I like to own my stuff.
Physical media FTW. I wish it was easier to obtain movies and shows physically. I like to own my stuff.
But now no one has all the new major releases, so in that regard it’s a worse experience.
Well then let me actually download the movie like it was a game, then! And how exactly does it take less bandwidth? It’s still tens or hundreds of gigabytes to download every time someone wants to install a game, most people only use the offline installers as backups.
What do you use for automating the backups?
And yet, somehow, GOG and Itch still exist, allowing you to download games completely DRM-free, as often as you like. If they ever go out of business, you can still use your local copies forever.
How do they do it? A mystery…
A while ago I wrote an extensible dummy data generator for Java.
I needed to fake some scientific data for a project at work and wasn’t satisfied with how closed for modification existing data generation solutions were, so I decided to tackle writing a library on my own.
It was my first major contribution to open source and had some architectural challenges which were fun to solve, not to mention the learning experience :)
Isn’t he only a CEO? What exactly did he himself create?
You’re not “supposed to” upgrade every year, that’s the point. You should be able to use a 5 year old phone if you want to.
So something like a Synology NAS, I guess.
Solid engine costs extra. That’s the entire point.
… And then spend twice or thrice the buying price fixing random things that break in a car that spends most of its time parked at the mechanic.
Absolutely ridiculous and serves nothing but to make the CEOs feel better.
They only “don’t have enough to pay us” insofar as they don’t have enough to pay us without sacrificing record high profits or CEO salaries.
It’s not owning up if you’ve been caught red-handed, denied any wrongdoing, and only made an apology video once your subs started tanking. At this point it just feels like damage control.
The “haha, we’ve made an oopsie” tone of the video (sponsorship jokes, plugging their store link, possible sex joke, deflecting to “I’m just a human” instead of fully taking the blame) don’t sit right with me. I was also hoping they would address Madison’s comments on why she quit.
Why would you use blockchain to track shipments when you can easily do the same with a standard database? What would be the gain?
IIRC from the original report, the claim here is that even “gaming” these metrics leads to the desired result, as you can’t game these metrics without actually improving your processes. I tend to agree.
How does this compare to Joplin?
Is there, or will there be a self-hostable server to sync notes between devices?
And does it support Markdown?