I remember on crt's there was a massive difference between 60hz and 85 hertz, but my laptop has a 120 hertz screen and I really don't see much of a difference between it and 60 hertz and it at 120 hertz, there is some work out there by some people that suggest that it's because the CRT is just structured in such a way that you're going to notice improved frame rates better and it's going to look less blurry to your eyes.
It might not sound like a common problem among all the people saying "It's not a problem for me!", but it's one of the big reasons that people's calorie counting fails is people are blind to the calories added by things other than the main dish itself.
It's actually a common problem that people go "Oh, I had some pasta, that's 200 calories" but not paying attention to the 600 calories of sauce slathered all over it.
Same with salad. People go "Oh, I've got salad, 50 calories" but then the dressing is several hundred calories.
Nothing is exactly like Chrono Trigger, it's in a league of its own as one of the best games of all time.
Final Fantasy 6 was released around the same time on SNES, and many people debate whether Chrono Trigger or Final Fantasy 6 are better, because they're both great. 4, 5, and 6 are all really good. The Lufia series is also great.
From the same era but with much different gameplay is Terranigma, and there's also the Legend of Mana series.
More modern examples of games that want to invoke Chrono Trigger are Septerra Core and Anachronox. Both are PC games, but they're old enough that any reasonably modern PC can likely play them at full speed.
To me, the biggest problem with Matrix is that Synapse and Dendrite are both really heavy. I use an alternative server called Matrix Conduit that's more like an xmpp server in how light it is. Only problem then is that Conduit doesn't have that many resources so it's always a few steps back from Synapse or Dendrite.
Keeping in mind that an instance is the specific server you're on, and a community is equivalent to a subreddit:
If you're on a small instance, then you'll be able to see all the posts from any community you join as if you're on the bigger instance. The local "All" will show all the posts from any community anyone has subscribed to on your instance.
On my instance, I've got posts from communities on many different instances.
You know that Facebook uses javascript? Do we stop using javascript? How about html? Do we shut that down? How about http? Do we shut that down? How about tcp/ip? How about the ascii character set?
The internet is based on Open standards. The idea that we would create a new standard just because someone we don't like is using that standard is a non-starter.
The idea that we would then kick out the people who created the standard to begin with, who founded this ecosystem because they made a decision that we disagree with, you're not looking for the internet, you're looking for high school. Everyone can form their clique.
No. Many images are stored locally, using a built-in service called pict-rs. Anytime that you directly attach an image to a post without linking to an external service like imgur, it's uploaded to the local server, and then hosted by that service anywhere it's displayed.
I remember on crt's there was a massive difference between 60hz and 85 hertz, but my laptop has a 120 hertz screen and I really don't see much of a difference between it and 60 hertz and it at 120 hertz, there is some work out there by some people that suggest that it's because the CRT is just structured in such a way that you're going to notice improved frame rates better and it's going to look less blurry to your eyes.