Funny enough, I just switched to Linux for a game I play because it was a hassle on Windows.
My friends and I play Halo Infinite sometimes and I've had some performance issues with it on Linux so I've always booted into my Windows 11 partition to play it. It's about as vanilla Windows 11 install as it gets.
But over the last few months it has been crashing all the time. It started happening very frequently - like once every ~30 min. It was a vanilla install. Basically just the game and graphics drivers. And everything was up to date.
I started playing it on Linux and now it just works. There's still a weird performance problem, but I can live with that because it's at least stable.
> Though that donation itself is a bit weird because literally on the just the other side of the neighborhood is. a park!
To be fair, parks don't just mean playground equipment. It could be a forested area with trails. It could be a drainage pond you can fish in. It could be a garden or prairie. It could even just be a big grass lot where people can play games and do whatever.
Payphones were mostly extinct even when I was a kid. I didn't have a cellphone either and smartphones didn't exist yet, except for the extremely rare Blackberry. But it wsn't a problem because basically every establishment around me had a landline phone I could use in an emergency. Now even landlines are extinct because just about everyone has their own phone on them at all times. Phones are easier to come by now more than ever. Kids have never been safer, even without their own phones.
Even when I was teen back in the 1980s while payphones were still going strong, they weren't everywhere you wanted them to be. My mother had a standing rule that if I was going to be out past 10pm, I had to call her to let her know. Depending upon where I was, it was often a pain to find a payphone before 10pm so I didn't get in trouble. If I had an emergency, it wasn't at all guaranteed I'd be near enough to a payphone for it to be helpful.
This is a good step, but it's not enough on its own. The core issue with game licenses is that they can be terminated at any time for any reason. There needs to at least be a well-defined timespan for the license. But of course that'd be seen as an "expiration date" and no publisher wants to put that on their game.
Well calling it a license in the first place is a strong step towards requiring an expiration as well. Licenses are rarely indefinite in scope, if I understand correctly.
> You go to a university because you are deeply interested in understanding the subject that you study.
You must come from a wealthy background because what you described is far beyond the vast majority of people's means - at least here in the US.
Most of us go to college because it's the only reliable way to get a tollerable job that pays well. Only a few of my college courses aligned with my interests. The rest were just the price paid for the degree.
In Germany, where I live, rather the children from rich families who will get some well-paid job anyway often consider getting some formal degree as an inconvenient barrier on their well-paved path towards a high-status and high-paid job.
On the other hand, if you don't come from a rich family, you better are passionate about what you study because otherwise people will "suggest" that a vocational training might be a better choice for you - then you will earn money now instead of wasting years at a university without earning money.
most people understand it to be an LLM, but that doesn't make the term mean only that. the point was illustrative, perhaps Meta's attention maximization algos would be a better example
my point was not that they are the same, but that the author seems to advocate for some technologies, like video calling and text messages, but cannot make the leap to see that it is how we use that matters. It is a selective diabtribe, framed in a positive voice, hence my counter-examples to match
Problem is that at YouTube's scale the remaining "some of the time" ends up being a collossal figure. On top of that, YouTube's effective monopoly position magnifies the damage done by false positives.
I heard a lot of great things about uv before finally having a chance to dive into it over the last month and... honestly I'm not sold. It's fast, but the UX feels like it's mostly just a wrapper around older tools.
I ran into a frustrating issue today with uv lock. AFAICT there's no way to "unlock" an individual dependency. I either lock everything down or forgo locks entirely. In my case I'm working with two tightly coupled packages - both developed internally to my organization - where package A is dependent on package B and I always want the latest version of package B. But I still want all my other packages to be locked to specific versions.
My thought was to stop using a uv lock file and just go back to pip with all my dependencies pinned with hashes in pyproject.toml. But after some digging I realized there was no way to put dependency hashes in pyproject.toml. So my only solution is to go back to using requirements.txt, at which point I lose out on the primary value-add of uv.
This experience left me feeling like the "new and improved" tools are still half-baked and that I should stick with the old stuff. It's a little slow and clunky sometimes, but I'm familiar with it and once it's setup it just does what I want.
My friends and I play Halo Infinite sometimes and I've had some performance issues with it on Linux so I've always booted into my Windows 11 partition to play it. It's about as vanilla Windows 11 install as it gets.
But over the last few months it has been crashing all the time. It started happening very frequently - like once every ~30 min. It was a vanilla install. Basically just the game and graphics drivers. And everything was up to date.
I started playing it on Linux and now it just works. There's still a weird performance problem, but I can live with that because it's at least stable.
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