gamefry
gamefry
gamefry

While I don’t know of all the legal statutes and such, its vary obvious that their primary standing will be by the fact that Nvidia is transmitting their IP to a customer. Though the customer may already “own” the game, and the origination of the data-stream may be from the “owners” hardware, it is still, at some

They can do it because the software industry has long since differentiated between a normal workstation and virtualized hardware, especially when you own one and not the other. I am not saying that is right, but it gives them the flexibility to restrict running the software on virtualized/remote access systems and

Probably what happened to Netflix. Every developer probably wants to have their own streaming service, or get some bidding war going on for rights to their game/

I wonder if the original larger design is easier on old hands. 

You are a really sad person to try to justify calling something a lie without any proof. To what end? To feel better about yourself? It serves no purpose to try to expose it. You’re not even trying to expose it. You’re drawing dumb conclusions without actually looking into it. Instead you’re getting actual details

The dead woman, or her daughter, aren’t using Twitter. Someone on Twitter posted the article from the newspaper. 🤷

Where is there always at least one pessimistic moron in the comments of stories like this?

Let me see...you’re taking issue that a 70-year old woman wasn’t able to find a replacement gaming console in her own city that’s been out of production for nearly two decades? This lady grew up in the 50's and 60's - maybe handheld video games from the 90's aren’t exactly in her wheelhouse.

Mother was 95, daughter was 70. Not strange she couldn´t find one. Chill

I don’t remember signing a permission slip for that feels trip....

Marine Engineer here.

I’ll pass on calling dibs. Few things are more humiliating than being underwater on a Hyundai.

Lol, the fuck?

I’m gonna go ahead and re-post this link right here, in reference to my elderly neighbor who just got swindled with one of these scams.

I don't think you read the last paragraph nor the corresponding links.

Agreed. It’s just so sad to read about people with such poor financial acumen that this kind of dealer behavior even exists. As a society, we do a terrible job of educating people about money/credit/savings, etc. I suppose it’s one of the main reasons poor people tend to stay poor.

The WSJ post does mention this, however it’s hard for a lender to track which dealer gave the advice. For example if someone has a loan on a Nissan and wants to buy a Kia. The Kia dealer says “Stop paying your Nissan loan after you buy this Kia.” I don’t think the buyer is going to call Nissan and say “So and so Kia

The WSJ article does name specific stores, but my goal has always been to inform buyers of shady practices not name dealers. Because some stores that aren't on "the list" may try this move, so it's more important for me to arm the consumer with knowledge no matter where they shop.

So close, and yet! Incorrect. 16s, my friend, is where it’s at. Looks better and more importantly: Makes tire selection much, much easier.

I was unaware that Honda and Toyota had studios... judging by the look of their cars, design is an afterthought after the engineering and manufacturing factors.