ramirezmike

joined 2 years ago
[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 4 points 23 hours ago (5 children)
[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 1 points 4 days ago

a big part of the complexity in programming (especially game programming) comes from balancing flexibility with speed (both implementation and performance). At some point, decisions are made weighing out risks, priorities and plans that will solidify a part of the code base in favor of speed (or some other factor) at the cost of flexibility.

this happens all the time

A lot of the reasons a solo dev or modder seems like they can progress so fast changing things is they aren't facing a lot of the same factors and they aren't needing to go through any rigorous testing.

At some point in the process, there's too much risk and and overhead involved to make any change. This is totally normal from triple A down to game jams.

And, you can't ignore that some of these things come down to game design. A change like you're suggesting, just adding a light, can negatively affect the balance of things even if it seems like it wouldn't.

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 10 points 4 days ago (1 children)

6 months doesn't sound unrealistic for re-doing a menu system. Designing, reworking art, re-programming workflows and then testing everything can take several months. Even just the logistics of releasing it after it's done, that alone can take a month.

Yes, it is possible to setup everything in a very generic way that is data-driven, but that also is a lot of work that has to be prioritized with the scope of the project and the team members available.

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 12 points 4 days ago

supposed to be basic launch features

isn't this very subjective and dependent on the game and scale of success?

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 8 points 1 week ago

the creator of deus ex coined the term immersive sim shortly after it was released

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 42 points 1 week ago (1 children)

that's a lie. They knowingly made something up. The AI doesn't know what it's saying so it's not lying. "Hallucinating" isn't a perfect word but it's much more accurate than "lying."

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 6 points 1 month ago (1 children)

I’ve used it to redact PII in user stories.

This seems like an inappropriate use case that could have legal repercussions :/

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 2 points 1 month ago

he's specifically asking about the treatment from Hamas and his examples don't make sense in the context of just Germans.. winking? giving an extra piece of bread?

His language is always tough to interpret but I've read the full quote several times now and I don't see how it makes sense unless he's comparing the hostage treatment from Hamas to the Nazis' treatment of the Jewish people.

I don't think he's saying that the Nazis loved the Jewish people but I also don't think that's what the headline says either.

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago

you're missing my point that there are many things in life that don't require several hours of context and nuance. And those things aren't automatically invaluable because they don't require much time to grasp and move on.

For example, a one-panel comic may only take a few moments to parse and enjoy. Does that mean it can only be enjoyed by those "with short attention spans"? Does that mean its value is inherently less?

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago (2 children)

there's more to life than political discourse 🤷‍♂️

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 33 points 4 months ago (5 children)

they can't really do that because that would be defamation and they would be sued for it. Bribery is a crime and while it is effectively the same as lobbying from our perspective, one is legal and one is not and a media outlet can't just accuse someone of a crime without evidence unless they want to close up shop

[–] ramirezmike@programming.dev 4 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I actually help run a blog, so I know first hand how many barriers there are between a blogger and their audience and it's getting worse all the time. These days even if you do make good content that people are looking for, the search engines summarize your content or rank higher content which has scraped your content and summarized it.

that's even if you have the skills to set up a blog and the resources to fund it. Not everyone has that and if they don't, does that mean their content shouldn't be seen?

trust me, I wish the Internet was different but with things like TikTok, you just have to focus on making your content and it takes care of bringing it to the people. With a blog, you really need to seek people out and a lot of people are turned off by self-promotion.

And yeah, I know there's an argument that people shouldn't need other's validation or attention for their art but also as a creative person it is demoralizing to make stuff that no one ever sees.

 
 
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