First money being speech, now they’re giving money rights! /s
First money being speech, now they’re giving money rights! /s
Both mentioned games are notorious for the scale of the issues at launch, and the resulting backlash. NMS for the lack of content and Cyberpunk for the huge amount of bugs.
As far as I know, no one has demonstrated that they can successfully run their own instance and have it integrated with the main Bluesky infrastructure as easily as the spec authors have claimed.
Until that happens, all the talk about federation and open standards is just that - talk.
They both had a lot of issues at launch
It’s mostly because C is notorious for not holding your hand and not telling you when you mess up. Write one past the array’s length? Might do nothing, might crash, might mess up some other data, might crash later in somewhere completely different.
Copy Kitty: https://store.steampowered.com/app/349250/Copy_Kitty/ has a demo
Fun elimination platformer. If you wish Kirby did more with the power mixing from Kirby 64, you’ll probably like it.
FWIW It was recently on the steam front page for me
I know I’m sidetracking the point but I despise projects - particularly game engines - that make up their own language and force you to use it.
Making a language is a good exercise and learning experience, but making a good language is hard.
Well you see, the oceanfront properties we already sold will be underwater, so we can build new ones and sell them again!
I thought it was: 1. The devil defeats Johnny, 2. Johnny defeats the devil but disappears after, and 3. Johnny defeats the devil and returns as a child to warn the Pope.
Anything with enough access to block malicious programs has enough access to block any other program by mistake.
Security modules like this usually get very invasive with the OS, to be able to monitor everything and so that malicious programs don’t have the ability to shut it off.
Low competition industries
Like most of them?
Everyone in this thread needs to go watch Line Go Up at Folding Ideas
I don’t think that’s true. Bitcoins are fungible, NFTs aren’t.
My point is that SQL works with and returns data as a flat table, which is ill fitting for most websites, which involve many parent-child object relationships. It requires extra queries to fetch one-to-many relationships and postprocessing of the result set to match the parents to the children.
I’m just sad that in the decades that SQL has been around, there hasn’t been anything else to replace it. Most NoSQL databases throw out the good (ACID, transactions, indexes) with the bad.
The fact that you’d need to keep this structure in SQL and make sure it’s consistent and updated kinda proves my point.
It’s also not really relevant to my example, which involves a single level parent-child relationship of completely different models (posts and tags).
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prior_art