Here are a couple of clear screenshots from the video.
Features:
Paddle
D-pad
Trackball
Keypad
Face buttons
Shoulder buttons
Full-sized HDMI out?
Headphone jack
It's pretty cool that it has all the inputs required to play every Atari home console game and even many arcade games. Having a paddle for games like Tempest is awesome. The trackball, however, was never designed for thumb use. In games like Crystal Castles or Marble Madness, you have to go nuts on it with your hands to be any good. Maybe it lets you dial up the sensitivity.
The best way to keep the air clean and safe is to privatize it. Air owners will have a financial interest in keeping their air clean and can sue polluters. Meanwhile, government would just ignore (or at most monitor) pollution.
There is no ability to benefit from poor texture mapping. The wobbling textures are essentially random. There is a finite number of PS1 games, and no game has ever "depended" on this behavior. Your argument is nonsense. Current emulators have the ability to fix textures.
I've heard those "share IDs" (as I call them) are indeed tied to your account. My worry is that some day there will be a data breach and a mass doxxing of people who shared YouTube links, so I always remove them.
Because they have AI voices and exciting forced captions that sparkle and bounce in the exact center of the video! Who wouldn't want that?
Now I kind of want to make a parody of what would be a traditional educational video on YouTube in the style of shorts. Like annoyingly rushed, AI voice, and huge forced captions blocking everything. Making fun of kids today who have no attention span for ordinary videos. A difficult topic like programming or CAD software.
I just installed and tested out the app. I have been using Léon - The URL Cleaner for a while.
I "shared" your clearurls link to URLChecker as a quick test, and then hit the "Unshorten" button, even though I knew it wasn't a short URL. This is what it resolved it to:
url=../../../1.26.1/specs/rules
Haha... Thanks?
In the end, it takes more taps to do what I want than Leon does. If I share a YouTube link, I have to press "Unshort" then "Apply" to remove useless parameters. Meanwhile, with Leon, it's already done. As soon as you share to it, it presents the plain YouTube URL with a simpler UI where the buttons have words on them instead of just icons.
Compare:
URLChecker
Leon
To be fair, it appears to have fewer features. Leon can't simply remove all parameters or check the URL status. URLChecker also had it's own quick list of share targets in that central drop-down in addition to a traditional Share button.
I think I'll keep both installed in case URLChecker does a better job with non-YouTube URLs.
Mine is useful and seems accurate. I just looked, and the top two apps are the ones I've been using for the past two hours. I have a Pixel 7 Pro. What phone do you have? Your numbers do seem useless.
Same, but once in a while I start watching a short from one of my subscriptions and then start scrolling. I guess because I watch some gaming content, YouTube thinks I want to watch that drivel.
The worst is people verbally explaining what you're seeing like a fucking documentary. It's extra bad because they stole the video they're narrating.
Even better is a split screen video where the bottom half is someone playing Minecraft or some really simple platform game because people don't have the attention span to learn some dumb fact without also watching some game on half of their screen.
Here are a couple of clear screenshots from the video.
Features:
Paddle
D-pad
Trackball
Keypad
Face buttons
Shoulder buttons
Full-sized HDMI out?
Headphone jack
It's pretty cool that it has all the inputs required to play every Atari home console game and even many arcade games. Having a paddle for games like Tempest is awesome. The trackball, however, was never designed for thumb use. In games like Crystal Castles or Marble Madness, you have to go nuts on it with your hands to be any good. Maybe it lets you dial up the sensitivity.