This article would be more useful to me (I'm saying to me, not in general, perhaps it's useful for many and I'm strange) if it had suggestions for which retro handhelds are really good. I don't particularly enjoy watching YouTube reviews of products. I don't particularly enjoy watching gamers on YouTube, either. I'd rather read something quickly. Do you happen to have a good article on decent handhelds? I've been saving up for a Steam Deck, but if there are any interesting retro handhelds out there, I'd check them out (but no YouTube, please).
I love it because it's an arts and crafts project and a computer project all packed into one. I definitely want to try this. I think instead of buying something with RetroPie already installed I'd just get a cheapy mini computer and install it myself. You could totally get away with using old hardware from a pawn shop or yard sale, even.
The fact that he did not want to buy it for the price he had to buy it for is enough for me to conclude that he doesn't give two shits about it. The ones he bought it from don't give two shits, either. It's just money. For Musk, money lost. For the former owners of Twitter, money gained. The rest is just blah blah blah to them. This is not so for the users of Twitter. It means much more to them socially than it does to the people who bought it and sold it. This, for me, is fascinating as a social phenomenon. Fascinatingly sad in a lot of ways.
He didn't want to buy the company. So, he's turning it into a pet project. The end. The oxymoron here of this story: The winners of the 44 billion Musk payed for it probably don't care that their creation is being run into the ground while the users of the platform are obviously in an uproar. In the end, the creators and founders, etc. did it for the money, not the cultural impact they would have on the world. Twitter's former CEO has allowed himself to be interviewed from time to time to say what he thinks Musk is doing wrong, but he doesn't seem to have any hurt feelings or express any kind of extreme regrets for the company being sold. From what I've seen in the news, he's pretty dry. The drama comes from the user end. This tells me something about how, in the end, it's just rich people doing business and doing as they please with what they please. It's kind of sad. Like, let's say I made something really cool with my own two hands and my creation got turned into something monstrous. I'd be upset. The people who made twitter are happy with their riches. In the end, the outrage and scandal is kind of pointless because it's just a thing that makes more money for big business rich tech people and it always was just that.
I sucked at that game. That's why I don't miss it much. LMAO. You did pretty well. The couple of times I played it back in the day, I had a negative bank.
OK, I wasn't clear on that. So, Full Tilt! was available before the pinball game was included with Windows. How much work would it have taken Microsoft to adapt their pinball game to 64 bit machines? I mean, come on, what kind of excuse is that? They updated Solitaire and added word games. Silly Microsoft.
I've been playing Demon's Tilt for a while now. It's a lot like Devil's Crush, with bonus tables. It definitely isn't a pinball game for purists. I'm not a purist, I like a lot of different pinball games, so I have fun with it. On older versions of iOS and Android there was PinOut, which I can still play on my iPad. Not sure how long that will last. A lot of the new pinball games you can get on Steam, etc. are not to my liking because they require in-game purchases (you have to buy the game, then buy each table individually).
I'm glad you're having fun with it! When you get tired of it, there's a sequel to it called "Dragon's Revenge." It's just as fun as "Devil's Crush." So nice to enable people to try retro games they hadn't played before. I had no idea it was on the TurboGrafx as well as the Sega. Most people understand it was developed for the Sega. Interesting!
No, I meant that my Sega Genesis is long dead. It died years ago, as in it stopped working. But it lasted a long time. It finally bit the dust in 2012 or so. This game is great! I played it nonstop when I was 20. A couple of nights ago for some reason the game popped in my head and I felt like playing it. Today I've played it at home and when I've been out of the house on my phone.
OK, so you're looking for a way to figure out punditry, what the pundits say that is fact and that is just their opinion. I think that this type of goal is entertaining. What you're looking for is to create software that singles out journalists (they are usually the pundits). It looks easy watching TV, it's harder to with software. But you're right in that regard. Journalists aren't what they used to be. They are free to have an opinion and they are viewed as fact reporters. It's problematic. Humans are now better at figuring that out than AI. But if you can figure it out, that's great.
This article would be more useful to me (I'm saying to me, not in general, perhaps it's useful for many and I'm strange) if it had suggestions for which retro handhelds are really good. I don't particularly enjoy watching YouTube reviews of products. I don't particularly enjoy watching gamers on YouTube, either. I'd rather read something quickly. Do you happen to have a good article on decent handhelds? I've been saving up for a Steam Deck, but if there are any interesting retro handhelds out there, I'd check them out (but no YouTube, please).