AdrianTheFrog

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 54 points 1 day ago (5 children)

Played through stray for the first time recently

The game was great, especially for how relatively small the team was, but honestly the reveal of the largest mystery in the game was very underwhelming.

It's still a good game though, I do recommend it.

[–] [email protected] 37 points 2 days ago (3 children)

George Floyd protests had more than that (closer to 8%) and they didn't really change anything.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 days ago

I have this chromebook that has some weird keyboard setup where depending on the keys you're trying to press you might be able to press 7 or you might just be able to press two out of the three. IIRC your scenario probably would have worked fine, I think they probably gave it better abilities in that area of the keyboard.

Anyways, there's always autohotkey for setting up macros

[–] [email protected] 35 points 1 week ago

Notable that this is how extreme they have to be to differ from reality

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago (2 children)

The giant is easy. The ground is easy. The lava though... Do you want the particles to stick together? To visually connect? To collide with each other? To interact with dynamic objects?

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago

Game design is a big part of this too. Particularly first person or other fine camera control feels very bad when mouse movement is lagging.

I agree with what the other commenters are saying too, if it feels awful at 45 fps your 0.1% low frame rate is probably like 10 fps

[–] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago (3 children)

It says 3% of Americans are atheists, but about 29% of Americans are "religiously unaffiliated". I would say the poll only overestimated by 4%.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 2 weeks ago

Yea idk listening to the clip it's probably not a new idea of his, just thought the cover was kinda funny

Anyways, he literally says in the clip that the American dream (of at least middle class prosperity) was mostly real for the baby boomer generation so I don't really know why they titled it that

 

like really, you're just realizing that now??

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 weeks ago

Went there once when I was like 12 or smth. Was cool to see snow in the summer, where I lived we normally only got snow for like 2-3 days a year

10/10 great mountain

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 weeks ago

In eastern US, first time using DDG on this device, it shows normal links (searched "Ukraine drone attack")

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

It is probably the most polished map. I would rather use something open source, but it makes sense why they switched.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago

Would be nice if it had a built in calculator and unit converter, that's a ddg feature I use a lot

54
double slit rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

What New York might look like with a double slit as your camera aperture.

Original picture:

Double slit kernel:

What an eye might see, for comparison:

Here's a different, big double slit:

111
rust rule (lemmy.world)
 

in the new minecraft april fools snapshot

it makes your gear degrade quicker with damage

171
pi rule (lemmy.world)
 
-7
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

With the smaller 14b model (q4_k_m), just letting it complete the text starting with "why do I"

edit: bonus, completely nonsensical (?) starting with "I don't" (what could possibly be causing it to say this?)

 

I was thinking about how hard it is to accurately determine whether a screenshot posted online is real or not. I'm thinking there could be an option in the browser to take a "secure screenshot", which would tag the screenshot with the date, url, and whether the page was modified on your computer. It could then hash both the tag and the image data and automatically upload this hash to some secure server somehow. There would need to be a way to guarantee that only the browser could do this, or at least some way to tell exactly what the source was. I'm not much of a cryptography person, but I would be surprised if it isn't possible to do this. Then, you could check if the screenshot you see is legitimate by seeing if it's hash exists in the list of real hashes.

 

mitosis or some such

 

I'm sure everyone's fine with this

 

reference image if you have no idea what I'm talking about:

I know this is a minor nitpick, but it's something that annoys me.

I got this graphics card mostly because it was the best deal on Amazon at the time (gpu shortage), and I also thought it looked decent from the images they had. However, when I actually installed it, all I see is the relatively unattractive looking black metal backplate with some white text. The other side is always the side shown in the promotional images too - not a single one of the pictures in the Amazon listing even shows the side that you'll be seeing 99.9% of the time. Do they think everyone hangs their PCs above them from the ceiling, or has open-air testbenches? Why do they never even bother with the other side? I know they want the fans on the bottom so the cooling is better, but the air in front of the CPU shouldn't be that bad, a lot of cheaper GPUs don't need that much cooling, and a ton of people have watercooling now anyways so the CPU radiators just go on the sides.

 

my reasoning: the actual colors we can see -> the wavelengths that we can extrapolate to -> basically extrapolated wavelengths plus an 'unpure-ness' factor -> not even real wavelengths (ok well king blue and maybe lavender if I'm being generous could be)

 

{ "id": 7384484874, "name": "BeamNG logo", "description": "The logo of the game BeamNG.Drive, a softbody physics based realistic driving simulator.", "links": { "lemmy": [ "[[email protected]](/c/[email protected])" ], "website": [ "https://beamng.com/game/" ], "subreddit": [ "BeamNG" ] }, "path": { "0": [ [ 804, 294 ], [ 804, 294 ], [ 804, 292 ], [ 805, 291 ], [ 810, 289 ], [ 815, 289 ], [ 815, 291 ], [ 814, 293 ], [ 816, 295 ], [ 816, 298 ], [ 815, 299 ], [ 812, 299 ], [ 810, 297 ], [ 805, 297 ], [ 804, 295 ] ] }, "center": { "0": [ 810, 293 ] } }

94
... rule (lemmy.world)
 

Just 3% less votes than Jill Stein, and he dropped out 3 months ago

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