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153
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • You know, having just played the Library level, I get the feeling that it was thematically necessary to drive home the scale of the cosmic horror you’re facing. It needs to be exhausting, overwhelming, unending…

    I tried it on PC in 2004 and all I got was a slide show.

  • Incredible, I’m sure. Especially for people who weren’t playing on PC before - it generally stands up to Half-Life in a lot of ways, including the enemy movement and maybe even AI, but the cutscenes have that more traditional cinematic look. I love the constant immersion of Half-Life, but this feels like watching an awesome sci-fi action movie, like Aliens. There’s enough survival horror and cosmic horror vibes as well to keep you going.

  • Halo: Combat Evolved. I get what all the hype was about. This is a good game!

  • Interesting, thanks for the tips. I’ll try to get something halfway decent, if for nothing else than to be able to say “you’ve tried it, now go get some actually good coffee.”

  • Yeah, you make a good point about familiarity. Even if it’s not the optimal technique, I’m likely to execute it better than a technique I don’t know.

    My guess is it’ll be fine, maybe a little funky. My friend has tried my Ethiopian espresso and won’t be blown away for no reason - not the way I expect a lot of people who go from Nespresso to this stuff would be.

  • You can add captions to images inside text posts - those are used for alt text. You can't add alt text to image posts though.

    Trust me, I would know.

    Incidentally, they're automatically adding the subreddit and post title together for the image's alt text, which still doesn't include OP's name.

  • Cryptographic analysis from ETH Zurich researchers Jonas Hofmann and Kien Tuong Turong revealed issue with Sync, pCloud, Icedrive, Seafile, and Tresorit services, collectively used by more than 22 million people. The analysis was based on the threat model of an attacker controlling a malicious server that can read, modify, and inject data at will, which is realistic for nation-state actors and sophisticated hackers.

    Interesting stuff, but it’s worth noting the scope and circumstances.

  • Who’s blind now!? Hehehe.

    I personally don’t, because I still play mainstream games and have been lucky with accessibility improvements to a lot of the ones I’m interested in. The Last of Us parts I and II are incredibly accessible, for example.

    Then again… I think A Hero’s Call is relatively well regarded, as something that’s also on Steam.

    You could check out audiogames.net to get a broader selection, but be mindful that a lot of the discussions get quite unsavory. I don’t frequent it.

  • Think of it as an indie album that went mainstream. The people in the scene weren’t exactly mesmerized, but it’s still a big deal.

  • It’s awesome that you enjoyed it that much!

    The gameplay mechanics and basic concepts are very well established in the audiogame space, so this game was by no means revolutionary within the blind community.

    What’s really cool about it is that it’s approachable for sighted players, such as yourself, and the voice acting is pretty good indeed.

    I also really like that the main character is a strong disabled female lead. A lot of things just happen to her, but she still *does * a lot.

  • Right, making it look like you know what you’re doing is a great way to advance to the point where you cause real damage. I’m glad you don’t have to do that, and aren’t getting trampled by the people who do.

  • Oh, uh. I’m wondering if I laid the irony down too thick. I think the comment you originally replied to is probably correct. I think your questions are typical escape hatches for men to be blameless in any situation. I can imagine you didn’t mean them that way, but that’s what’s usually meant by them.

  • You’re absolutely right. The most likely scenario is that the person with first-hand knowledge misinterpreted the situation. These poor men and their sensitive feelings…

    Irony aside, I’m sure it’s a complex situation with different relevant points to any perspective, but the events as told line up with my own experiences.

  • I’ve witnessed many of the kinds of situations described here and I think the proposed mechanics adequately explain them.

  • I can’t watch yet, but I have to know: how angry is Steve?

  • I think of that like putting multiple things in the same basket, but putting two locks on that basket.

  • I’m not evaluating whether or not you should do that, but, assuming you trust your partner and their op sec, you could send them the secret via a disappearing message on Signal or some other E2E encrypted communication method.

    You set it up on your key, they add it to theirs later, the secret disappears into the ether.

  • All it takes to sync TOTP is to manually set up the secrets on all keys.

    Keeping a second factor in a password manager makes it a single factor, doesn’t it?