prime-directive
Prime Directive
prime-directive

If you have a real argument as to why actual non-violent political speech should be censored, let me know.

In the event you do keep using Twitter, a quick walk down the replies to a Biden tweet once a week is usually enough to net a few hundred accounts to block. Things start to clear up a little after a few months of that.

Trolling is a dead meme, champ. There’s no challenge or skill in getting a rise out of people, never was. And you’ve dedicated a whole account to it, oof.

Matching the colour in the PSD to the pantone ink sources in the printer has been covered by other responses, it’s not something that can be perfectly simulated with standard CMYK colour (but can be approximated very closely).

This lawyer also cited US Trademark Act section 43 and 15 USC 1125 as though they were different things. It’s all bluster, no substance.

Peter Capaldi as Geralt in season 5?

I have the same gut reaction trying to picture Hemsworth as Geralt, but to be fair I had the same reaction to Cavill in the first place and he ended up nailing it.

Right? I don’t remember the last time someone had me from on their side, to “oh, maybe she just misunderstood the offer”, to “aaaand we’re done” in such a short time frame.

Which platform do you think is being advocated for by observing that systems with more capabilities have more points of failure and that the two aren’t equivalent?

Like, it’s comparing apples and oranges in a conversation about fruit trees.

Futurama’s anime parody was particularly painful, especially coming from a show that had such a good track record of understanding its nerd culture influences.

I mean yeah, it’s trivial to just hit dismiss. Are you sure you’re not just dismissing anyone who points out that you’re comparing apples and oranges, though? My response wasn’t angry but you dismissed it too. Here’s what I said:

“Things that do less have fewer points of failure” isn’t exactly a revelation. I’m all for using the hardware you like best, but let’s not pretend they’re equivalent.

For sure. Anti-piracy was easier for me to argue against when I was working gamedev, since it gives almost no meaningful benefits. It was much harder to try to convince anyone not to use kernel anticheat on client-side because something needs to exist (unlike with piracy), but the latency tradeoff is usually seen as a

The limitation of server authority is latency. The more it has to verify, the longer it takes, plus the network roundtrip on top. The effects on the client manifest as things like jitter and rubber-banding. (Related, there’s a pretty good explanation of Overwatch’s predictive netcode somewhere out there that touches

Game came out today, you’re here shitting your pants because there’s not a “proper review” up already.

All good! Personally I find most tech channels have some kind of problem - JayzTwoCents has some bias and gets things wrong a bit too often, and don’t even get me started on the downfall of LTT, but GN and Steve are just about as good as they come. I pretty much only follow GN and Hardware Unboxed for tech news and

They’re packaged and put into regular inventory.

Assigning ownership of competition entries is pretty standard fare, it’s just not usually something as complex as a piece of music.

GamersNexus is a PC tech news and analysis channel run by Steve Burke. He’s worked hard for years to develop a strong reputation for objective, fact-based and data-driven analysis of computer technology. They’re highly respected across the industry, both by manufacturers and consumers.