Again, I’m just saying I would not have done it. I would have kept them in a playable condition or at least sold them for parts for enthusiasts.
Again, I’m just saying I would not have done it. I would have kept them in a playable condition or at least sold them for parts for enthusiasts.
I don’t care that it’s Logan Paul.
Upset is too strong a word. I disagree is all.
You’re reading a lot into an opinion and it’s not even a STRONG opinion.
That’s the rub. People immediately jump on the “hate train” just because I don’t agree with him. You can disagree with someone’s actions without being mad at someone.
As mentioned by one of the commenters in the article, the “look” could be accomplished without actually ruining most of the real hardware. Authentic, original hardware may still be relatively widely available, but it won’t be that way forever and once they’re all gone that’s it.
Yeah, it’s not much fun to just sit in a known suicide spot just to jump as soon as somebody shows up to take the ball on rotation, but I have definitely been known to try to get the ball out of bounds if I know I’m dead and it’s an option near me.
It took me personally about that long if not longer, but I was combing every corner of every room looking for hidden stuff since I knew I couldn’t go back without restarting...turns out I still missed stuff even after all that.
I really don’t think you know how a decompiler works...it’s just not that simple to make usable code out of most decompilations. It takes a lot work and trial-and-error which is quite likely more work than starting from scratch.
Thawne didn’t hijack the story in my opinion.
I think the unmoored feeling is at least partially intentional.
If the Still Force is the opposite of the Speed Force, wouldn’t the Negative Still Force just be the Speed Force? Or is the Negative Speed Force just the Still Force?
It’s not worth the effort to decompile Windows because a decompiler program doesn’t just spit out something that’s going to work. It spits out an approximation, but you’ve got to put a lot of work into actually making it work in the end.
Yeah, I work in a legacy language and it was designed such that basic commands like set or write can be shortened to single letters in order to save memory in the source code. Old code was often written as extremely long lines as well because they couldn’t even afford the extra memory needed for carriage returns.
Jesus, it’s unfair now if you just don’t have time to play. If it’s medal-based, at least if you’re good in the little time you can play you get a boost. The only way to make it completely fair is to just drip feed you XP whether you’re playing or not.
Does it though? Some of the challenges are the equivalent of getting one or more medals already. You can also get medals (and a lot of them) without necessarily winning a match or being team MVP.
I’d expect a per medal XP award.
I mean useless in the sense that they have systems there that don’t actually do anything.
They’ve already got a medal system that does nothing. They should give you some XP for each of those medals.
I mean, it was just a funny coincidence that you brought up Windows when said author cited the lawsuit in their book. As for it being done, it’s not going to happen. Nobody likes Windows enough to bother with the practically impossible task considering how bad the decompile would actually be and how much work it would…