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  • It never seems that bad unless you're in that small percent. Cancer's a damned awful way to die.

  • M-discs don't rot, theoretically they're one of the best consumer long term storage mediums. I think the practical issue with them on a super long timescale is keeping a functional reader if blurays fall out of fashion.

  • A lack of resistance now will only guarantee a quick decent into Russian style authoritarianism. We resist now, or wait years or potentially decades for it to crumble and break.

    The 50501 resistance movements have already shown us that there are millions who will openly resist. The military parade showed hundreds of slouched out of step soldiers, who would only do so if they disapproved. Trump only barely won the election.

    Does he have supporters still? Of course, a wide amount of brainwashed people are were caught in that trap, and it will take a great deal of hardship for them to come out of that cult.

    But just as many are not. Just as many are awake to what is happening. It may decent into civil war, and I think it'd prudent to be ready for that possibility, but hopefully it won't come to that.

    But don't wait for a mass movement to make it safe for you to stand up, or you may never stand up.

  • I didn't mind the RPG elements of the gunplay either, it was how lame all the guns felt to use even with higher skill levels.

    The shotguns take way too many rounds to down people, the smgs are pea shooters, and pistols can work 'okay' with headshots, but still just feel meh. I assume the sniper rifle is more effective, but I never used it much.

    I wish they had made it to where low skill makes reloading and accuracy suffer greatly, but if you do manage to score a hit, it hits hard. That would make shotguns in the early game super valuable, but they could've still encouraged stealth and more thoughtful tactics by limiting ammo availability.

    Basically the RPG and story elements combined with Tarkov style gunplay and thief-style stealth would be heaven for me.

    I'd be curious of your thoughts on revision, if you ever feel like coming back to this comment section by the time you finish it!

  • I've made multiple attempts to finish Deus Ex over the years after giving up each time due to aspects of the gameplay. I would normally never give a game so many shots, but I love so many aspects of Deus Ex, I want to finish it, but I just can't push myself to continue at certain points.

    I think the biggest blockers for me is I love stealth games (thief 1 & 2 are all time favorites), and since Deus Ex does have a stealth system (though primitive), I tried to play it like a stealth game. a vanilla install means that tranq darts make enemies run around like headless chickens for a minute, and knocking people out with the baton is unreliable. Combined, stealthing is both visually comical, and realistically very frustrating to play.

    I could deal with that, and I've tried switching it up by going more guns blazing, but the gunplay of Deus Ex is just as clunky, with slow firing weapons that deal little damage on fairly bullet spongy enemies. Combat just doesn't feel good.

    I tried mods and overhauls to see if I could rectify either of those points, which do sorta work as a bandaid. GMDX makes stealth WAY more fun by making headshots with darts work instantly, and baton-ing more reliable. With it, I was able to get all the way to France without quitting, but I think due to GMDX, I hit a massive difficulty spike where my stealth build became much less viable, and it once again just became frustrating. Perhaps a gun-build with GMDX would've been the winning combo.

    I think my best experience was with the Revision overhaul, but by then I had started the game over so many times over so many years, I just didn't have the appetite to get all the way back to France.

    It's a truly spectacular game in terms of story and open-ended level design, but the mechanics really are a turn-off. I wish my first playthrough had been with the Revision overhaul (though I wish it didn't radically change the level design so much), but even still, I think it would benefit from a Nightdive style remake.

  • I don't believe it, or rather, I think Warren Spector and Ricardo Bare really didn't intend for it to be political, as both of them were far more focused on the game parts of Deus Ex; the mechanics, the balancing, the level design, etc, and are seemingly oblivious to how the writers took those puzzle pieces and made it political. Though the extent that Spector is completely unaware of that fact seems unlikely, and instead he almost appears to be whitewashing what the writers intended? Based on his stance that only movies and books can be political (which is a wild take, since games actually seem the most ripe medium for that), he may be trying to frame Deus Ex as A-political because of that.

    It's very odd that this article didn't interview the lead writer of Deus Ex, Sheldon Pacotti, for an article about the politics of the game. Sheldon absolutely intended for it to be political, and in an old interview even goes into how capital is used to exploit and suppress the working class, which is what leads to radical terrorist groups, such as the NSF. He mentions in the first part of that interview series how the designers would create the levels without any concept for a story (citing the blown up statue of liberty as an example, which the level designer just thought would be an arresting sight to the player, but didn't consider how it would tie into a wider narrative).

    I think Ross's Game Dungeon on Deus Ex really shows how Pacotti was able to make Deus Ex realistically political by tackling real societal problems that we all now face, and very few games dare touch, which continues to set it apart it decades later.

    Also @Coelacanth@aggregatet.org & @paultimate14@lemmy.world

  • If you'd prefer a more standard union, there's quite a few to choose from. The United Workers Union looks to be alright.

    An issue with more 'standard' unions is that they are often centralized with leaders that can become corporate captured, and thus begin to actually work in the interests of the capital owners to only achieve modest or lackluster gains from negotiations or strikes. They also often don't have a particular interest in truly changing the status quo, such as working toward building up popular movements to challenge capitalism itself, instead only hoping for a wage increase so they can continue as usual, with a little more breathing room.

    The ASF-IWA doesn't demand that their members don't vote in political elections, only that as an entity, they're more focused on direct-action instead of waiting for permission from a corporate captured system.

    But in the end, joining any union is still a win in my book.

  • We better start preparing for a stronger resistance now while we still can.

    1. find local communities and get involved to make connections
    2. We can effect things drastically with a general strike. This targets the establishment's income streams, and can bring a fascist government to its knees if done on a large enough scale.
    3. Contact a union and attempt to unionize your workplace so that the general strike is even more effective (plus, ya know, better pay and working conditions as a bonus!)

    This method would not only work in the US, but anywhere in the world.

    Union Suggestions:

    1. Continuing to participate in publicly visible resistance demonstrations like 50501 (the next one is July 17th) to encourage others to stand up with you and prove to that there are millions of others who will join them in the fight. A large part of Nazi Germany's success in taking over the country was a lack of massive public demonstrations against the new regime, making people feel helpless and afraid to take a stand.

    If we put in the work, we can resist this and we can win. Look at how effective these methods were when used in Chile in 2019.. If we completely reject the political system and rebel on a mass scale, there is NOTHING they can do to stop us.

  • Going grassroots with direct action is currently the best way to both resist and build horizontal decentralized power that isn't prone to the corruption and lobbying that the democrats have fallen to.

    1. find local communities and get involved to make connections
    2. We can effect things drastically with a general strike. This targets the establishment's income streams, and can bring a fascist government to its knees if done on a large enough scale.
    3. Contact a union and attempt to unionize your workplace so that the general strike is even more effective (plus, ya know, better pay and working conditions as a bonus!)

    This method would not only work in the US, but anywhere in the world.

    Union Suggestions:

    1. Continuing to participate in publicly visible resistance demonstrations like 50501 (the next one is July 17th) to encourage others to stand up with you and prove to that there are millions of others who will join them in the fight. A large part of Nazi Germany's success in taking over the country was a lack of massive public demonstrations against the new regime, making people feel helpless and afraid to take a stand.

    If we put in the work, we can resist this and we can win. Look at how effective these methods were when used in Chile in 2019.. If we completely reject the political system and rebel on a mass scale, there is NOTHING they can do to stop us.

  • What do I do?

    Jump
  • Lemmy allows a user to export their subscriptions, blocks, and saved posts /comments in a JSON file from their account settings page.

    That file can then be imported into a new account on any other Lemmy (and even Piefed) instance.

  • If you'd be interested in a tracker-like DAW, Renoise has a native Linux version.

    For more traditional DAWS, Bitwig and Reaper are the two best Linux native options. Reaper is quite cheap, and also offers a trial version that just nags you like winrar.

  • In the US, pensions have become extremely rare, and were mostly replaced with a 401k, which is essentially a tax deferred stock market account. Often your employer will match contributions that you put into it up to a certain point.

  • What if their wages hadn't allowed them to build up a 401k? They likely won't be able to survive on social security alone.

  • If a DOCSIS 3.0 modem still can't be saturated by the tier of internet someone is paying for, what advantage would 3.1 have?

  • Fractic’s tone, the repetitiveness, and gimmickery.

    He's pretty much like that in most of his videos.

    Just because someone did amazing stuff in the past doesn’t mean they’ll have the ability or the desire to do it in the future—the relative incentives, market conditions, technological constraints, and just plain interests are completely different than before. It’s fun to think one is changing the world and potentially getting rich by pushing the state of the art further than anyone thinks is possible. That’s not where these folks are now.

    This I completely agree with. From what I can tell he's established relationships with these folk over the years during his coverage of C64 content, and likely felt having them be a part of this would legitimize it and make it feel like the 'real' commodore, but time and time again, when I've seen old legends try their hands at recapturing the magic of their past, it rarely seems to work out (a good example would be every ex-Sierra employee trying to make a new game with a kickstarter, all of which resulted in pretty sub-par stuff).

    But I’d have a really hard time forking over any scratch to this guy, and will be astounded if this actually produces more than a curiosity.

    I'm of the same mind.

    I don't think Frantic has any sort of bad intentions or scheme planned (he's been steadily making classic computer content for over 7 years now), but I do think he's completely blinded by nostalgia, which is an ever pervasive theme in his videos, and is ultimately wildly overestimating the commercial viability of the goals he has in mind.

    If he really did refinance his house to help fund all this, I don't foresee things going too well for him, as I can't really imagine them being able to put to market something that will be affordable enough and with some killer feature to truly capture a wide enough market. I also would love to be proven wrong here, but based on how the Commander X16 went, I suspect whatever they produce will be far too overpriced for what it actually is, and will end up only appealing to a small subset of similarly nostalgic Gen-x'ers who have the disposable income to get into it, similar to the Spectrum NEXT.

  • I think you're right, and they may be exaggerating a bit. From what I can tell, this would be almost act like a 4th setting between power-save and on-demand mode, so you still get most of the benefits of power-save mode, but without the need to switch back to on-demand when you do something intense.

    also @MangoPenguin@lemmy.blahaj.zone.

  • It gathered 160k signatutes in 3 days thanks to all the new press, hopefully we can keep up the momentum.

  • I suspect a VM would introduce latency (big no no for music production), and I can't imagine getting ASIO working would be easy (though I've never tried it).

  • According to WineHQ, Ableton's compatibility with wine isn't stellar. FL Studio works quite well in it, but switching DAWs can be a pretty major undertaking.

    For Linux native DAWs, Reaper and Bitwig are the two best options. Reaper is the most affordable at 60 bucks, with an infinite free trial.

  • Socialism @beehaw.org

    Industrial Socialism - by William Haywood & Frank Bohn, 1911 (Full Book)

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    1984: Bandersnatch, Bailiffs, and the Battle for a hit game | BBC Archive

    retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    The Spectrum Show EP151

    Environment @beehaw.org

    Elon Musk Is Poisoning Memphis

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Arcade vs Console 6 - GameSack

    Games @lemmy.world

    Ross's Big Game List (of Freeman's Mind & Game Dungeon fame)

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Game Boy Advance: Incredible tech on just 2 AA Batteries

    Games @lemmy.world

    70% of games that require internet get destroyed

    retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    1982: The Future of COMPUTER STORAGE | The Computer Programme | BBC Archive

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    ChinnyVision - Ep 560 - 3D Starstrike - Spectrum, Amstrad CPC

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    The Nintendo DS | GameSack

    Gaming @beehaw.org

    How Pajama Sam Made Me A Leftist | Political Breakdown Of A 90s Videogame

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    How Pajama Sam Made Me A Leftist | Political Breakdown Of A 90s Videogame

    Videos @lemmy.world

    Finale: How Music Software Dies - A fever dream of a UI & UX review | Tantacrul

    Tabletop Gaming @beehaw.org

    Model dungeon scenery to inspire the would-be evil overlord: part one

    Technology @beehaw.org

    Resistance from the tech sector against Trump's Fascism - Drew Devault

    RetroGaming @lemmy.world

    Disappointing Sequels 3 | Game Sack

    retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    The Spectrum Show EP150

    retrocomputing @lemmy.sdf.org

    Repairing The Rarest 386 - HighTreason610

    Permacomputing @slrpnk.net

    Still browsing like it's 1999: Fresh tools that keep vintage Macs online and weirdly alive