umbraroze

joined 2 years ago
[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 6 points 12 hours ago

Especially in case of physical media. "Hey, here's a cool game/movie/recording. Now slap it in a box and never use it again."

(well, ROM/optical and other media that doesn't wear away, anyway - if it's a floppy, that's going to probably degrade anyway, might as well slap it in a box)

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 61 points 22 hours ago

What do publishers do? Editing, layout, other parts of design (e.g. covers), most importantly printing, marketing and distribution.

Oh you mean what do scientific publishers do? Um... that's a good one, huh... they just kinda take the money and leave everyone else to do the actual work?

 

Frets on Fire, an open source Guitar Hero clone.

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 5 points 2 days ago

Forever ago, Steam added like 1 minute of playtime on games I literally installed once and never played, so I was a little bit apprehensive. Anyway, I figured that was in the past now. I was also encouraged to do this after noticing that Steam's cloud save was more than happy to just fetch save data from games I've literally not touched for 10 years.

 

So that's one of the hardest achievements I've done, from Stanley Parable. I just got the PC version of Stanley Parable Ultra Deluxe which literally has 10 year achievement, though. ...will probably show up before that to brag about my Xbox version achievement of SPUD in, uh, a while, though.

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I personally don't have the heart to say any of the legacy support stuff is completely useless. I mean, yeah, Windows has support for floppy drives (through standard USB mass storage), but you know what? I can image old floppies through it. If Windows recognises floppy drives and gives it drive letter A, that's not that much of bloat really, just an entry in a list or something.

And also most Linux distributions also have ancient-ass legacy stuff, though admittedly usually you need to specifically install it and maybe even hack a bit to get it to work again. ...why yes, I am going to do physical terminal stuff one day, 1980s style, and I'll be very mad if I need to hack serial getty support in the hard way!

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Yeah, I always thought the drive letters weren't a very elegant solution to the problem. Can have only 26 devices. Should just use numbers. You can fit 256 devices in one-byte integer identifier! Like how tape drive is 1 and printer is 4 and floppy drives are 8, 9 and so on.

spoilerCommodore 64 peripherals

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 15 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (4 children)

Fun thing, when you attach a USB floppy drive on a modern Windows 11 system, it'll dutifully give it drive letter A: and even has a floppy drive icon. (Which admittedly doesn't look like a floppy drive. At all. But it has a floppy!)

And why yes, I've seen it a time or two in recent years, because I've been archiving some stuff. Imaging shitloads of old floppies.

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 5 points 4 days ago

Reminds me of an old joke about how everything in KDE has a k and it's very annoyink and irrtitatink bekause they have less laks user interface kuidelines than GNOME. (I haven't checked, they've probably vastly improved since then)

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 2 points 4 days ago

Nah. Tried to imply that everyone has sex. Even if you're not thinking about it. (Especially if you're not thinking about it.)

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 1 points 4 days ago

Ah, I thought Windows always used its own paging file thing located on the Windows NTFS drive, and couldn't be made to use Linux swap.

If so, enabling that thing probably isn't a good idea if you are dual booting, yes. Can see all sorts of problems coming from that.

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 6 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) (2 children)

It's a Unix derivative. To get the fundamental software thing working, someone has likely had hot gay sex. To get the modern software going, someone has had hot transgender sex, hawt furry yiff, and autistic sexual intercourses. ...What I'm getting at, sex won't make Arch unbootable. Guess you just personally fucked up somewhere.

[–] umbraroze@slrpnk.net 1 points 5 days ago (2 children)

What

Linux swap partitions have no bearing on Windows boot times. Or Windows in general. Windows doesn't care about partitions it doesn't recognise. (It might, on occasion, fuck with the bootloader though, but I hear it's a little bit less of a headache in UEFI days)

 

When this was released ~10 years ago, everyone knew the series was full of dark humour. Now, we have to ask the all-important question: Why is this particular video quickly starting to look like the only 100% realistic video on how to teach children about computers? Not that we should use this video for this purpose - maybe we should fix the industry instead!

 

Google isn't exactly helpful. I tried searching for Minecraft Xbox 360 version conversion door bugs, but the most helpful thing I got was a Gemini answer, and after a while, I was like "what on God's green Earth are you babbling about?"

The world (and, I think, this particular structure) was from my Xbox 360 Edition world. It got converted to Xbox One. Then it got converted to Bedrock version. As far as I can recall it's an old bug. Hence the exhibit space.

This screenshot is from current Windows Bedrock version. Previously in this world, the block was (as I recall) a grass-topped dirt block with "upd ate" [sic] written on it in green pixel text. I was actually surprised today when I loaded up this world and saw that it now has a completely new question mark texture! When I converted the world to Java format in Chunker a few days ago, the block was (predictably enough) completely gone. (Don't have the error log at hand sorry)

So which exact conversion bug was this? What exact version of Minecraft had weird door conversions? I'm sure this is documented somewhere!

As you can see from the screenshot I try to keep the world generation bugs and weirdnesses as an exhibit, but, well, I guess the time ran out on this one.

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submitted 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) by umbraroze@slrpnk.net to c/aboringdystopia@lemmy.world
 

From video by Drago on a mobile app Simply Draw. Which tries to lure children in by promising to teach them how to draw! But then you get hit by the paywall.

We shouldn't inspire children to follow their artistic dreams, and then hit them with the paywall. Or the mobile app economy as a whole. Not all adults are ready for the mobile app economy, why do we think children are ready for that? It's cruel. It's harsh.

I followed along with the tutorial, it's not a bad way to learn how to draw a fish. I'm depressed and I'm depressed because of fish thing so... I dunno if this helped me, it was a thing, I dunno.

 

(Obligatory "I wish we still got pack-in material in the new games" "Oh, I wish we still got - you know - packaging these days")

 

Sorry if this triggers some unfavourable English-as-Second-Language memories!

 

This is the official short film adaptation of the classic video game Papers Please.

...made in 2018 by a Russian team. Way before the whole Ukraine war thing, you understand. ...though I'd obviously love to hear where they are now.

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