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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/)HU
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2 yr. ago

  • Pretty sure the "lite" version were just decluttered versions with features missing and better optimization (usually aimed at developing countries). They likely track as much (well, probably not as much because there's no point in tracking stuff that the app doesn't support).

    I've actually noticed they started decluttering the messenger app. Rooms are gone and they've also removed the chat suggestion bubbles at the top. So when you launch the app you only see the conversations you have active.

  • There's plenty of games which haven't been cracked. More often than not, a game is updated to remove denuvo or a drm-free .exe is released accidentally.

    It's been hard to crack games and from what I've read, it now relies on one person and they have been a bit of a lunatic.

  • I really don't get the hate over the term.

    It was ok to use "Boomer" as an euphemism to call someone old, but make it about games that often don't take themselves seriously and are a throwback to when gaming started to grow massively, and it sucks?

  • You can buy musical instruments for that price software or hardware synthesisers, for example.

    But that's exactly the point, I'd rather pay double, triple, quadruple for something I know I'll use for hundreds of hours (a monitor, a new keyboard, a Steam Deck) than 80€ for a game that will last me 12 to 30 hours (I only play offline story-based games).

    Even if I considered game X, there are decades worth of games availabe for under 10€ that I would rather get now or buy a Humble Bundle while waiting for a sale.

    The issue becomes of all publishers start to follow Nintendo's model and not dropping the prices much.

    1. The medium games came in were more expensive
    2. The gaming audience was much smaller
    3. Games were only sold in stores
    4. If you add all the season passes you're paying the same or even more with further microtransactions
    5. Games in general now have a longer shelf life

    AAA games in my country have been 69,99€ since the PS3 launch and now they're asking 79,99€. It's true development costs have ballooned, but I just don't think that's a good price/time ratio and rarely do I buy games over 15€. I really don't mind waiting a couple years.

  • Drugs are not legal in Portugal. It's decriminalised up to small amounts (ie personal use), which is different.

    My understanding is that:

    If you get caught with a couple of joints (or any drugs), they are confiscated, you are identified and you might have to pay a fine, do community service or go to an addiction consultation.

    If you're over that limit, but not overly, you get the above + go to court and will likely receive suspended sentence and will have a criminal record.

    If you get caught with a truckload (obviously for distribution), if it's your first offence you'll likely also get suspended sentence, such is the state of our justice. If it's not your first offence, you'll likely do jail time.

  • I'm seriously questioning if you're a bot because you're throwing keywords and expressions you do not understand.

    You're complaining of SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) articles. This is clearly not that.

    Those pages ask the same question multiple times even in organic forms of how you randomly type it into a search engine. Just close any site that starts wit something like: "Don't you hate it when your remote doesn't work? If you press the button on your clicker and nothing happens, you need to open it and repair the buttons. If you need to fix your remote, start off by checking the batteries..."

    Journalism should not be "here's all the info in one paragraph" and be gone. However, a good lead should reply to 5 questions: What? Who? How? Where? When?

    But this is not a news piece, this is a fluff column about old tech. You can just hit Wikipedia for easy-to-read digested info (I do that frequently).

    For all the shit ways journalism has gone to, and the ocasional misteps The Verge has done (their pc building tutorial, go watch it for a giggle) this actually a cool column.

    Last I read they are also sticking it to Spez by continuing to report on the shit Reddit has been doing.

  • Long-form journalism predates google by a few centuries.

    Out of the 15 paragraphs, it says it uses sound in the 3rd and explains the mechanism in the 4th.

    I agree that they should've put it in the title or the lead, but this wasn't a news pice, it's a monthly column focused on analog buttons. The first 2 paragraphs rightfully contextualise the hardware to an era most of us don't know much.

  • De Vries DNS at Spa, sry for spoilerinos.

    But on topic: I just learned to not hit social media until watching or unsubing the instance.

    You can't make all the other content that advents from the race spoiler-free (tweets, photos, videos etc), especially if some drama breaks out.

    This is coming from someone who got spoiled yesterday of the pole sitter by a thread here as I was getting into the second half of the Q3 replay....

  • Allegedly Roiland hasn't been very involved in the creative process of the show since season 2. He just mostly showed up to the record booth (like Family Guy's Seth MacFarlane).

    Dan Harmon (the other co-creator and) and the remaining writting team were responsible for it.