Skip Navigation
InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)TI
Posts
0
Comments
704
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • They are pursuing "realism" but the pursuit of realism also means that you must sacrifice strong artistic style, because style is - by very definition - deviation from realism.

  • My friend likes Terraria, and I like Minecraft.

    This is because he enjoys gameplay where there is technical progression and objectives. Things to 'do' and reasons to get stronger.

    I enjoy gameplay where the objectives are mostly just goals I set for myself, and I have freedom for creative expression.

    In Minecraft I can spend forever working on aesthetic builds or complex redstone contraptions, whereas once my friend has exhausted all the progression in the game he finds it boring.

    Conversely, although Terraria does allow for building and furnishing nice bases/homes, the 2D nature is limiting for me vs 3D and can't satisfy my desire to build, so I'm not into it.

  • Or someone who is vegan.

    Or someone who just likes the taste of oat milk.

    Personally I'm not vegan and I do drink dairy milk, but I also love oat milk and often order my coffee that way. It adds a kind of nutty taste which I really like. Would recommend trying it sometime.

  • Tunic is a beautiful game, both visually and mechanically, and very worth playing.

    It's basically a modern recreation of how it would feel if you were a 10-year-old kid in the year 1984, and your Dad comes home from a business trip to Japan with a brand new Nintendo Entertainment System, not yet released outside Japan, and a copy of The Legend of Zelda, fully in Japanese.

    Of course, you don't speak any Japanese, and the Internet isn't a thing. But you have this amazing console and amazing game and you're surely going to play it no matter what.

    That's Tunic.

  • My system is that after I unpack the shopping at home, I leave the bag beside the front door. Then next time I go outside I see it like "Oh yeah, the bag!" and put it in the car.

    Works for me.

  • On top of this, a lot of cars come into circulation through vehicle hire and corporate fleets. They get driven for a year, then sold on the used market.

    Vehicle hire companies also all want specifically white/silver/grey cars for the same reason - they are inoffensive and unobtrusive to the people renting them, and they sell better afterwards too.

  • When I am interviewing people, I always appreciate when the candidate is honest about their experience - or lack of experience.

    If I ask about something and they openly say they never did that, that's a green flag. I want to see people are honest about where they don't have experience, because being honest about gaps is an important trait for when they are actually on the job.

    On the other hand, if the candidate has something literally written on their CV/resume as a "strong skill" but then when I ask about it they struggle and try to bullshit their way through it, that's the opposite. If someone is happy to lie to get the job, they'll probably lie when they're on the job too.

  • It's an absolutely dick move by Patreon.

    I guess Patreon figure it will make them as a platform more money, because people tend to forget about subscriptions and just let them keep going.

    But it's awful for creators who release less frequently, because people will start to feel cheated when months go by and they don't get anything. And I'm sure the creators won't enjoy that pressure either.

    It's like Patreon are cracking the whip, telling creators "Work faster, you have to justify your monthly subscription now!"

    Assholes.

  • This is happening because all platforms are optimising for the one single metric that matters most to them - engagement.

    When you consider all users as a whole, the way to get engagement is not to have a good UX that lets you tailor what you see, and search for the specific things you are interested in. The way to get it is to shove a constantly changing and brightly coloured stream of "content" right in people's faces where they don't have to do any thinking or make any decisions, they just mindlessly click what is offered and consume.

    From Netflix's perspective, they want someone to go from opening the app to watching a video in 10 seconds, and if they don't achieve that, it's a failure which they will optimise away.

    The platforms have over the years systematically stripped back every control lever you have over what you see, because control means time spent thinking, and time thinking is not time engaging.

  • I remember reading a story a while back about someone who owned a legit CS version with a proper serial and activation.

    They had to change computer, and in doing so had to reactivate Photoshop, but it wasn't working. They contacted Adobe support and explained the situation but support basically told him nope, not a chance, we aren't helping you. You need to subscribe to new Photoshop.

    So Adobe accepted that yes, he bought a perpetual licence for Photoshop and that yes, the reason it isn't working is the online activation, but they still refused to help.

    Scumbags.

  • I also own a macbook in addition to my desktop.

    It's currently running macos, but I very much hope Asahi development continues, because that's very much my desire for the final destination of the machine.

    For a long time I was happy with Apple's commitment to being a mainstream OS that was privacy-centric but recent shenanigans have me starting to doubt.