Comment Re:Version (Score 1) 46
It went to the same place that Winamp 4 went to.
It went to the same place that Winamp 4 went to.
I loved Hack 1.0.3. At some point between then and now NetHack got unreasonably difficult for me.
Multiple instances of a name with a non-ASCII character and of course
I'm referring to Erdos, of course, but I replaced the non-ASCII o with a diacritical so it would be displayed in my message.
I rarely see _any_ subtitles that are not appallingly bad, including YouTube.
Do they actually do anything?
Microsoft is offering a 6-figure buy out, but it's in Windows Store credit.
They are desperate. They had multiple massively valuable IPs, including their own, and they ran them into the ground by putting out woke slop. To compensate, they are trying everything except making good movies.
They probably can't move the movie up. Knowing Disney, they'll probably still be doing reshoots the week before.
> One of those s[c]ents that everyone is programed instinctively to move away from.
If that were true Antifa riots wouldn't be a thing.
How many supervillain plots in comics, TV or movies started with the villain's corporation introducing some kind of tech like this, only to later use it to manipulate people?
> well above stuff like Star Trek.
In 2026, "Blue's Clues" would be above Star Trek in terms of science.
I have a lot of criticisms of the movie, but it was fun. It was funny. It was entertaining. And because of that, I can give it a pass.
As someone who's been using Samsung phones for about 15 years, I had no idea there was a thing called "Samsung Messages". I tend to tune out all the shovelware that phones come with (and take steps to remove or disable them).
I really like Samsung phones, but their software ecosystem is abysmal. Everything they provide is inferior to other options.
Half the world runs on VBA for Office applications (or used to, it's probably less now), and VBA for Office has never been officially supported by Microsoft. You're on your own if you choose to use it.
> It was possible to run the entire Windows XP system plus user applications on 128MB of RAM... 256MB was a luxury.
I did an experiment once. Windows NT 3.5 could boot with 12MB of RAM. You really couldn't do anything with it, but it did boot up. As I recall, the whole OS only took up about 40MB of disk space.
Disobedience: The silver lining to the cloud of servitude. -- Ambrose Bierce