After getting burnt by both the Google endorsed Xoom and the Google branded Nexus 10, I don't trust them at all when it comes to tablets.
With both, Google released good products, and then proceeded to ruin them with abhorrent changes to the software. They made the Nexus 10 dump it's tablet interface in favor of a big phone UI ffs.
Graphite is ok, but honestly it's a solution in search of a problem
Maybe if you have a massive pr, splitting it up like this works, but that's really a planning failure. Stories should be smaller, and if you need to keep them separate for a long time, use feature branches
No. You'd use something like rev.2020 or some other wide gamut color space. Jxr already supports this, and some programs, like the Xbox, take hdr screenshots as jxr
They can both model any color equally well, it's just oklch works even closer to how we perceive colors changing. LAB and all derivatives are in Cartesian space, with luminance, a, and b being the defining axises. Luminance is self explanatory, but a and b are just axises of how much red/green and blue/yellow there is. It can be difficult to think of a color in how much blue it is, for example, when the color is something like nearly pure red. They both affect the hue output, so varying one can create strange, unintuitive colors
LCH works in polar space, like a color wheel. L is still luminance, c is the "colorfulness" and h is the hue. H and C let you set the same values a and b would, but in a more human way. We're used to thinking about colors changing independent of how much of a color there is, and that's what LCH does. Vary only the h and you get very different colors. Vary only the c and you get the same color but in different amounts of saturation, from full color to no color
For me the problem with AW, more than the boring gameplay loop, is the weird episodic format they shoehorned into it. You'd just be getting into the groove of the game, used to the annoying combat and stealth and such, and then it yanks you out of it and you have to watch an end of episode cutscene, and then a new episode cutscene, just to continue on
Control is awesome. I was hoping AW2 would be more like control, but from what we've seen in the media that doesn't seem to be the case. Still holding out hope
The Android Market (now Google Play Store) was launched in October 2008 with the T-Mobile G1 phone, helping establish app ecosystems on mobile.
Before app stores, finding and downloading apps was difficult through various online stores and carrier stores with limited selection and updates.
The Android Market centralized the app experience and discovery, giving access to a growing variety and number of apps in one place.
Early app successes helped drive more users, phones, developers and apps in a reinforcing cycle that grew the app economy exponentially.
Popular early apps filled gaps in Android's capabilities in areas like weather, file management, flashlights as built-in features were still being developed.
Later apps brought extra abilities beyond necessities, like music streaming, ebooks, games, social media and more.
The article reminisces on the novelty of app stores and ecosystems in their early days compared to their ubiquitous presence today.
Over 100,000 apps were available by mid-2010 and over 3.5 million apps today on Google Play.
We now take app discovery, updates, and the overall app experience for granted due to how well app stores do their job.
The article credits the Android Market and Apple App Store for establishing apps as the norm and changing our expectations of mobile.
True, however it occupies the same niche an ORM occupies, without the foot guns. Updating a slew of different db tables from rather clean and straightforward models is relatively simple. It tries to live somewhere between just doing everything as SQL and abstracting everything away like AR does, giving you conveniences from both approaches. You don't get mired in scoping hell, but you don't have big ugly messes of nearly-identical SQL statements either.
Sign language yes, real time captions no. Only whatever live transcription crap your phone or computer could do