Web 3 games are simply ponzi schemes hidden behind a super grindy game. As far as I know, none of these games actually produce anything of value from the labor put into them, so the payouts must come from new money entering the scheme.
Web 3 games are simply ponzi schemes hidden behind a super grindy game. As far as I know, none of these games actually produce anything of value from the labor put into them, so the payouts must come from new money entering the scheme.
The new UI and effects look stunning, but I’m concerned about the new corporate direction the project is taking
Okay that is the first argument for it I’ve read that actually makes sense
If we need warning lights for self driving cars, the technology is not ready.
How would they earn billions without getting the money from other people’s work?
Where is the piped bot when you need it
I refuse to believe fr*nce is a real place
Anyone know how I can program Anarchism?
Maybe changing your user agent just let’s you reroll whether you are in the group of users that are used for testing the increased loading time
Five seconds of loading is an upgrade over five consecutive ads
That is why I always try to avoid installing Wine natively
Yes. It is. And consumers can’t do a thing about it.
I actually have some telemetry enabled on my system, cause I want the maintainers of my distro to have more data to base their decisions on. I always disable everything for proprietary software though, and I dislike opt-out systems.
I used to think open source applications were simply the inferior alternative that you choose when you don’t have the money for the real thing, but then I started to notice how Blender suddenly looked almost equivalent to the industry standard apps when update 2.8 came out. That made me question my previous position. Fast forward a few years, I now proudly use Linux and FOSS applications whenever I can.
I have forgotten about it and later rediscovered it so many times now
How do they work?
So we’re gonna spend a whole bunch of energy to capture carbon, then use even more to turn it into fuel, and then just burn it again? Yea sorry, I am not convinced.
Edit: Unless if course they propose it for grid balancing, like we talk about doing with hydrogen. In that case, I wanna know exact energy efficiency numbers and equipment cost.
7z files can be browsed without decompressing the contents, and tar.xyz archives preserve file system attributes like ownership. They have totally different use cases.
If I want to back up a directory on my drive, I would use tar.xz. But if I want to send some documents to other people, I would use 7z.
Same! I also have a separate directory for college assignments and stuff. Gonna set up separate gitconfigs for both soon, so there is a smaller chance of mixing up my credentials