

I haven’t used it before. What’s so bad about it that you would give it a 0?
I haven’t used it before. What’s so bad about it that you would give it a 0?
I’ve got a GameStop subscription which gives you a $5 a month coupon. I would almost always use it to pick up Pokemon cards. I haven’t been able to find any cards for a number of months now and decided to ask an employee about it.
Apparently the cards are no longer being sent out in the volumes that they used to. Instead of getting weekly shipments, they might get a monthly shipment (not as many boxes) and it’s a little random.
He mentioned that people would somehow find out that a shipment was on its way and wait overnight just to be able to buy them up in the morning.
Some employees are even being stalked just so that they can figure out when these shipments are coming.
If you’re in the U.S., the Institute for Justice does a ton of good work. They’re a nonprofit that picks up cases to help out those who can’t afford to do so. They’ve gotten a lot of cases all the way to the supreme court.
They’re committed to challenging things like qualified immunity, or civil asset forfeiture. Things that really need to be taken on given what we see happening today.
Edit: Link: https://ij.org/cases/supreme-court-cases/
On Windows you can open up a WSL shell or PowerShell session directly to the folder path you want.
Hold ‘Shift’ then right click anywhere inside of a directory and you will get an option to “Open PowerShell window here” as well as to “Open Linux shell here”.
To anyone who is reading this comment without reading through the article. This ruling doesn’t mean that it’s okay to pirate for building a model. Anthropic will still need to go through trial for that:
But he rejected Anthropic’s request to dismiss the case, ruling the firm would have to stand trial over its use of pirated copies to build its library of material.
From the Grayjay FAQ:
Does Grayjay require a subscription?
No, We offer a way to pay for the app once. The app will function identically without paying.
Yeah that’s not very typical, I’d like to make that point.
Out of the 133 countries where Helldivers 2 was previously locked out of, now there are only 7:
1. Belarus
2. Cuba
3. Iran
4. North Korea
5. Russian Federation
6. Syria
7. Viet Nam
https://steamdb.info/sub/906471/
Update: now there are 8… Japan was added to the list: https://steamdb.info/sub/137730/info/
However it looks like Japan has its own individual game package so players aren’t actually locked out over there.
Edit: formatting
Announcement from the Institute for Justice, which took up this case:
https://ij.org/press-release/u-s-supreme-court-sides-with-atlanta-family-in-wrong-house-raid-case/
A deeper dive on the case here:
https://ij.org/case/martin-v-united-states/
Body camera footage is also included lower on the page under the “Video” section.
Definitely a great nonprofit firm that does a lot of good work bringing cases before the Supreme Court. Especially for those that can’t afford to do so.
Has it been? I just got the email from Steam a few hours ago that it’s Live now. They must be really late to notify everyone in that case.
Looking through the community it looks like they had originally planned to release the demo today, but ended up releasing it early on June 5th, and the game will only be available to play until the 16th.
Edit: typo
That’s the one, looks like they switched names about a year ago?
You could use Ruffle since its an emulator for Flash:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruffle_(software)
https://github.com/ruffle-rs/ruffle
Websites like HomestarRunner use this so you can still experience the site as it was intended.
I mean, it really depends on how you define scam. If you’re so loose with the definition that you would have considered No Man’s Sky a “scam” when it first released, then I can understand that.
Otherwise it’s not really a scam. There’s a free trial going on right now in Star Citizen.You’re free to check out the game for yourself. It’s in a really good state compared to what we’ve previously seen (not even close to bug free, but way more playable than before).
Sure, larger businesses have more developers to get more work done. But there comes a time when throwing new developers at a problem convolutes the process and actually slows things down more than it helps.
Something that seems simple to you like a flashlight attachment may not be so simple under the hood.
Solo indie devs have an advantage because they’re familiar with all of the code. They’re the ones that wrote it.
They don’t need to learn a new part of the code when making fixes or changes. They don’t need to explain to another dev that “you don’t change how this information is passed in here because you’ll need it to look just like that in some other section that you’ll never touch”.
Additionally any decisions/changes/etc. are all decided by one person, no need for meetings to get everyone on board and explain exactly what you want to do. No need to try to get everyone to understand your vision for what you want to happen.
A famous comic might explain this process a little better:
To quote one of my favorite authors:
“I’ve come up with a set of rules that describe our reactions to technologies:
1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works.
2. Anything that’s invented between when you’re fifteen and thirty-five is new and exciting and revolutionary and you can probably get a career in it.
3. Anything invented after you’re thirty-five is against the natural order of things.”
― Douglas Adams, The Salmon of Doubt: Hitchhiking the Galaxy One Last Time
Maybe some people just don’t like grinding for hours and hours to replace stuff they already acquired in a video game.
Personally, I would rather that we have a variety of different game types and options. There aren’t very many MMOs that make death feel meaningful. If it’s not your type of game, then don’t play it.
Here’s another win for Steam:
Subnautica has a multiplayer mod, but it only works with an older version of the game. Steam lets you downgrade the version, Epic games does not.
There’s a petition going around now to try to “Save Subnautica”.
It’s at least worth a shot: https://www.change.org/p/save-subnautica