I see there is already a healthy dose of DLC anti-hype in the comments, but I have one thing to add...
I see there is already a healthy dose of DLC anti-hype in the comments, but I have one thing to add...
It's sad to see them treat this like a throwaway; I'm actually a hundred times MORE likely to buy it BECAUSE it doesn't have UPlay.
1. Nintendo decides they are going to attempt to police a not-insignificant portion of the internet.
With how much real estate Steam wastes on its store page trying to shove recommendations down your throat (as well as practically greenlightizing the UI for already-released games), it'd be pretty hard to do worse than the real thing nowadays.
I found the first season of Psycho-Pass to be pretty interesting, and I'm usually not much for the guro aspect but managed to get through it (actually I seem to recall the very first episode of S1 having one of the worst moments and nearly dropped it but was glad I didn't).
Especially if you work remotely, you lose something that face-to-face employees can take for granted: visibility. Of course, we have various tools like voice chat, e-mail, instant messaging, and ticketing systems, which help to bridge this gap, but those tools are still reliant on the remote employees using them…
Whether Your Resume Fits on One Page
Now if only NFS didn't STILL require connection to Origin... To me that's still not "free".
Kugimiya Rie Talking To Herself Simulator
This has occurred to me a few times over the past few years since I took a fully-remote full-time web developer job. They track time and there is always tons of stuff available to do even in downtime, so I have always felt pressure to make my 7-8 hours per day count. That might sound daunting and at first it seemed…
I completely agree on the "great if you already have a set of friends to play it with" count. The matchmaking was lackluster on Sunday in particular, and I quickly got the vibe that random public matches would be as generally abysmal with Evolve as I found them to be in L4D.
The best part of this video is that it doesn't forcibly install Uplay.
Sounds like http://blog.codinghorror.com/the-nonprogram… yet again. It really is sad and alarming, not only how hard it is to find people who even know how to code, but to think how many such people are employed and making crazy salaries when someone actually competent could code circles around them even fresh out of…
You'd be surprised at just how dumb some of the "dumb shit" is though. For example, screening front-end developer candidates at my prior job, I saw one resume that listed "Java Script". Two words. If someone can't even *spell* the technology that is most crucial to their potential job correctly, I'm certainly not…
W3Fools' answer isn't exactly that long, but TL;DR W3Schools has long had a history of faulty content and promoting bad practices. Other sources like MDN and SitePoint are far more reliable.
http://www.w3fools.com/ was created a few years ago to answer that question.
No. No no no no no. W3Schools gained a reputation among experienced web developers as the scourge of the internet, providing faulty information and generally doing more harm than good.
Agreed 100%. When I read the last sentence in the quote, I thought "either this guy isn't talking about actually KEEPING a server up and running, or he has never actually run a server in a large-scale high-demand production environment where security and responsiveness matter."
And am I right in suspecting that if you wrote your wife a letter like this, you'd be sleeping on the roof for a month? :P
How can you claim with a straight face that "it's not insulting to female gamers" when you clearly are not one of them? Oversensitive or not, I'd say female gamers have a right to be put off by this. It's blatantly bad form.