j-rose
j-rose
j-rose

doesn’t live up to Le Guin’s novels huh?

Came here to see if anyone said this.

It’s just completely bizarre that Nintendo, a company with a deliberately family-friendly image, makes it so difficult for a family to share games. 

I think the main issue here is you have got kids and still play pokemon.

It totally does because I switch Switches all the time with Pokemon. I somtimes like it in handheld but will transfer my pokemon data to my husband's tv switch if I'm playing for a few hours or more. 

I think everyone agrees on the surface, but often the context of saying All Lives Matter is seen as diminishing BLM in some way. It’s a fair point, but I can also see ALM being used completely innocently, as if to say “remember, too, that we should all value every life.”

The mini’s in this game are great too, just not anywhere near a lot of the other super cars. That’s why most people hate it. 

I actually read something which elaborated on the multi-language option, but I’d need to dig around a little to find it again. If I recall, Chinese specifically was included as some kind of appeal to emerging markets.

Here’s probably the only write up of Ninja Ryukenden for PC Engine you’re likely to find.

Same here. Also a big Ninja Gaiden fan (if my avatar didn’t give that away). My TG16 Mini arrived on Tuesday, and when I plugged it in, Ninja Ryukenden was one of the first games I tried. About halfway through the first act, I missed a jump and landed between two of the boxer enemies, who juggled my helpless Ryu to

could be worse

You forgot the Baby Shark song playing on an endless loop. 

I have a mid-2010 Macbook Pro that I kind of gave up on a few years back because the battery was shot and it was pretty sluggish (I got a new laptop through work, so I basically just used that for everything). Then I got a wild hair last summer and decided to fix it up. I’m not even super techy, but I managed to

It’s fine. It’s easier than butter and crisps the bread well. What is it with you people and making these grand, unsupported statements, and acting like you’re doing something profound?

Bloody slick yeah That F-Zero!!!

I work for a software company. We spend months testing our new builds and generally track down 99% of the bugs ourselves, however, there’s always one or two customers that discover something. Thankfully most of the issues they find aren’t anything major.

Oh man, the cycle of reporting a bug as “cannot reproduce” and then it being sent back to you when QA is able to reproduce it is so frustrating. One time I was working on a bug in a web app that turned out to be linked to a specific MacOS non-default scrollbar setting, so it was impossible to reproduce on my Windows

I’ve never really developed software but I have been a modder and I remember the debugging process as taking days, sometimes weeks to fix...sometimes you never fix it.

For me the worst I’ve seen was essentially “this buggy behavior that looks like it has a simple fix is actually the result of a required change in a core function, so now we need to completely refactor this core function to accommodate both the required change and a fix of the buggy behavior. And also cross our

Or better yet, 2 people working on a similar issue, or 2 bugs that are somehow related to each other, and the fix for either bug, or both bugs, ends up creating new bugs, or breaking the fix from the other person, and so on.

I’ve been doing this for 12 years now. It’s just part of the long process.