TOTK performance on switch is not bad at all. I don’t know where what perception came from. I haven’t experienced any low frame rate issues after 100 hours.
TOTK performance on switch is not bad at all. I don’t know where what perception came from. I haven’t experienced any low frame rate issues after 100 hours.
Did you enjoy BOTW?
Gaming
Gardening
Hiking
3d printing
Woodworking
Reading
I agree, it’s been pretty bad for a few years now at least.
The IARC ruling […] is intended to assess whether something is a potential hazard or not [… and] does not take into account how much of a product a person can safely consume.
From the article. ^^^
This is something people frequently overlook. A substance may be a “possible carcinogen” and also completely benign at levels any sane person would consume.
Bananas also contain carcinogenic material, but eating bananas is still very much a healthy thing to do. There’s a reason banana equivalent dose is a concept, and “the dose makes the poison” is a common refrain in toxicology.
Elden Ring again after taking a break from it for a while. Exploring new areas, it’s fun.
SEO and propaganda / misinformation campaigns
It really is. And now I’m excited to see how Rick & Morty does it.
I look at it from the standpoint of federated social media dethroning the reigning social media “monopolies”. Companies like Facebook, Twitter, and now Reddit have shown that they want engagement at all costs and will prioritize profit over people. The faster they die, the better.
From this perspective, numbers and growth are important (although of course they’re not everything): People won’t jump ship to a new platform unless there is a critical mass of users, because a platform needs a sufficient number of users to provide the same variety of user generated content and communities that people have come to expect.
More people using federated social media also means more developers, better apps, and a better user experience for everyone using it.
There’s a snowball effect, and maybe one day we’ll get out from under our rich social media overlords.
I look at it from the standpoint of federated social media dethroning the reigning social media “monopolies”. Companies like Facebook, Twitter, and now Reddit have shown that they want engagement at all costs and will prioritize profit over people. The faster they die, the better.
From this perspective, numbers and growth are important (although of course they’re not everything): People won’t jump ship to a new platform unless there is a critical mass of users, because a platform needs a sufficient number of users to provide the same variety of user generated content and communities that people have come to expect.
More people using federated social media also means more developers, better apps, and a better user experience for everyone using it.
There’s a snowball effect, and maybe one day we’ll get it from under our rich social media overlords.
Agreed. Gaming has become a lot more acceptable over time and with younger generations. This is also true for the gender gap in gamers, which factors into the dating scene.
I use GitHub Desktop for 95% of my git needs, terminal for the other 5%
Slow for me as well (North America). It can take 10-15 seconds to load a page or perform an action like upvoting.
If you want to avoid counting towards reddit’s traffic, take a look at LibReddit / LibRedirect
https://github.com/libreddit/libreddit
https://libredirect.github.io