Comment Re:Seriously? (Score 1) 198
Negative prompts are a thing. Training data is irrelevant if the developers have enabled "-whitey" by default.
Negative prompts are a thing. Training data is irrelevant if the developers have enabled "-whitey" by default.
If I didn't have internet or update servers what I own is basically a coaster.
No, it is better than nothing. Perhaps you should avoid buying games that are buggy as shit on day 1 and need a zillion patches to be enjoyable. Also, some of us actually enjoy playing single-player games and don't care about battling with 10-year-old strangers.
In the old days, PC games had copy protection on the CDs, but patches could be freely downloaded and archived forever. That would be a nice compromise for consoles, but of course nobody can be reasonable in this industry.
My only hope is that MS makes some sort of converter for
Haha. A while ago I needed to upgrade an old Outlook Express 6 mail machine to Live Mail 2012, and I couldn't because the OE6 mailbox format is too old and unsupported. The solution was to do a stopgap upgrade to Live Mail 2009 and then to 2012. Microsoft had deleted every trace of Live Mail 2009 from their web site, so I ended up having to pirate a free application just to perform an update to a totally different version.
Companies today are all too happy to leave you in a lurch.
They get lots of attention, but end up annoying both ends of the political spectrum.
blocking highways during rush hour
I thought it was the conservative truck drivers doing that in Canada.
I don't come here to do my own research. That's the whole point of news. The editors should do their damn job.
Not just technically, but politically. Every single time I see a new article on Rust, I get a preemptive headache before I even start reading the comments.
Even in the open source community, everything needs to have a huge, aggressive marketing campaign.
We've already had artificial intelligence in government for thousands of years.
As long as they don't automatically take it out on the people at the bottom of the totem pole. I've done my share of blue-collar work and 15-hour days, and people in those fields are always under extreme time pressure and unreasonable quotas. I'm so glad I don't have to do that work anymore.
Then don't use it. The problem at hand is that chipsets don't support ECC RAM, not that people would be forced to use it.
Also, I believe the real additional cost is negligible. ECC costs a lot more due to economy of scale and pricing politics, not parts cost.
Back in my day, you didn't even need the floating point coprocessor for stuff to work. Coprocessors were accelerators, not a base requirement.
Seriously, does anybody actually understand how computers work at the metal anymore?
The question is whether any software will run on Win 10 after EOL. Today's tech culture isn't satisfied with letting old dogs lie -- it loves to reach for the shotgun at any opportunity.
No, they buy consoles the play the exclusives. Part of the reason nobody gives a damn about the XBox X or PS5 is because there's so few exclusives.
Meanwhile, the underpowered Switch, based on last-gen mobile technology and drifting joysticks, is killing it in the marketplace. Nerds are clueless as to why... as usual.
Same way a bank feels. They just charge it back, and screw you if you were stupid enough to spend the money. You're fully responsible for overdraft fees.
Those anti-competitive practices were in play since the beginning, and Mozilla eventually rose to 50% market share. Then, Mozilla lost it, despite regularly taking in and spending hundreds of millions a year.
I've heard the same argument over and over for the demise of Netscape. If people actually tried to use the garbage that was Netscape 6, they'd understand that Microsoft didn't kill Netscape, they killed themselves.
Real Programmers don't write in FORTRAN. FORTRAN is for pipe stress freaks and crystallography weenies. FORTRAN is for wimp engineers who wear white socks.