Code is pretty small but images, textures, voice lines, etc can crank it up
Code is pretty small but images, textures, voice lines, etc can crank it up
Being allowed to die when you choose is fine and good but good goddamn it should not exist in a neoliberal system that’ll end up socially murdering all the non-productives and the neurodivergent.
It’s definitely not simple to use but I agree that the conceptual model it represents is straightforward. I think a lot of the problems people have with git come from not understanding the underlying data structure before learning how to manipulate it.
Someone else has a server and their infrastructure is set up so you can upload a zip of some executable and they’ll figure out how to make it run. You don’t worry about any details except your code and whatever API is require to be compatible, and they worry about hosting it, making sure it has memory, CPU time, disk space, DB, etc.
Right tool for the right job. C is a stupid choice for most modern apps but it’s indispensable for embedded stuff
FO3 was kind of a disaster in terms of narrative and roleplay. And the established world building.
Let me be clear, uh, you wanna know how I, uh, ruined Reddit?
It did though? I don’t know what point you think you’re making but the internet did in fact grow from a technology limited to universities and the armed forces to a publicly accessible network, mostly off the back of publicly funded researchers and various techies that started their own neighborhood ISPs.
Just close your eyes. Illusions don’t work if you can’t see them
Does a more recent stack translate to any real benefits?
Nah, meters are very straightforward and easy to work with. How far is a kilofoot? God only knows, but a kilometre is a trivially visualized distance. What’s 1/100 of a foot? Dunno, but with meters it’s a centimeter which is, again intuitively easy to grasp.
Others have covered it but the API pricing was $12,000/50 million requests, which is absurd bordering on comical.