

We used AA on our CRTs back in the day. Of course we were all running like 1024x768 as the resolution so it was a lot more needed. The higher your resolution the less you need it.
We used AA on our CRTs back in the day. Of course we were all running like 1024x768 as the resolution so it was a lot more needed. The higher your resolution the less you need it.
Xterm supports multiple tabs right? Do that? If not then tmux.
That’s not what Valve’s policy said at all. It basically says you have to promise you aren’t infringing and disclose how it’s used so customers can make their own decisions.
https://steamcommunity.com/groups/steamworks/announcements/detail/3862463747997849619
It’s basically the most conservative fence-sitting position they could have picked.
I’ll pick up Reforged if they fix the performance and campaign bugs.
Steam gets all of my gaming money until other vendors support Linux.
Yeah, if someone has write access to your boot partition then you’re kind of already screwed.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_memory
What would you describe it as? With virtual memory it pretty much functions that way, no?
Use case is not having enough RAM?
Have to pass because there’s no mention of Linux
Because it was like that in Starsiege: Tribes and was obviously the way to go after you played that compared to moving with the mouse and aiming with the keyboard lol.
“You can’t discuss this contract with a lawyer” GTFO lol
I think the only items it’s violating are being non-modal (which is violated all the time genre defining Roguelikes) and by not being ASCII (ditto, pretty much every genre defining roguelike has a tileset these days).
That list was surprising light on Roguelikes.
Stoneshard seems much more classic Roguelike to me than lite.
Kbin does the microblogging thing
Physical sales could see as low as 10% of the sales making it to the developer. Made Steams 30% cut look likea bargain.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct2Drive
Steam didn’t allow 3rd party titles until late 2005 but Direct2Drive launched early 2004.
Stardock Central was 2001.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stardock_Central
The contract is forced on you in order to obtain employment when there is very unequal bargaining power. It’s also a contract that’s largely deemed illegal in actual courts. He disclosed information that is no longer business relevant and instead just an object of historical interest at this point.
I suppose if you were forced to sign a non-compete to work for a fast food restaurant that you’d also honor that and not work for any other fast food restaurants if you had to quit?
In the US, contracts are routinely deemed unenforcable by courts for being overly broad. A contract with an indefinite duration frequently falls under that category.
I’d imagine reddit could be profitable too if they stopped throwing money at stupid shit like NFTs and avatars. Selling API access for AI training was a good move in terms of bringing in income since it basically costs them nothing, and they could have totally pulled that off without pissing off half their userbase.