Or the funders get bored of waiting after ten years of “no Mars yet” and cancel the project, leaving you with a half finished rocket.
Or the funders get bored of waiting after ten years of “no Mars yet” and cancel the project, leaving you with a half finished rocket.
I guess whether it’s worth it depends on whether you hate writing code or reading code the most.
Yeah, it’s all on Twitter and Facebook.
Why hang out in the run down Nazi bar when the big chain bars are all accepting Nazis now?
0 == []
>> true
"0" == []
>> false
0 == "0"
>> true
Some automatic conversion is fine.
a=3+0.2
print(“Hello {name}. You are {age} years old”)
That kind of thing. But the principle of least surprise definitely applies. If you get to the point where you’re adding two booleans and a string, I feel like the language should at least say something. At least until the technology exists for it to physically reach out of your screen and slap you.
I don’t often go for the full 4K Blu-ray Remux releases, since they’re massive and I can’t really tell the difference over a 10-15GB rip, at least visually. Just a webrip is fine, depending on the source. Plus even my nVidia Shield Pro struggles with them at times.
That doesn’t mean it’s not higher level than other languages from more recent times.
More like how all the music streaming services work. All got pretty much the same content, just different quality and prices.
Pretty much most of the screenshots I get these days are a photo of somebody’s screen taken on a phone.
Makes me long for retirement or at least a giant solar flare.
Much higher floor limit, and no need to enter your PIN every X transactions.
Why would they do that when Google and Apple already do all the work for them?
If they can’t pull this off as an ARM device and recompile all the games to run on it, then don’t bother.
There’s nothing they can really bring to this that the Steam Deck hasn’t already done better.
Honestly, I was there the first time round, when everyone raw dogged the internet on a single modem per PC. I remember Blaster, and talking people through removing it in 60 second bursts as their PCs shut down over and over.
It was carnage. The average user doesn’t need open ports on the internet, and they’ll only get their elderly machines infected instantly if they did.
It’s worth it. Story is kind of cringe, but the co-op adds some unique gameplay.
Two controllers. Split screen.
Good news! If you find somebody else that has it, you can download and play it with them for free.
No. It’s two player cooperative gameplay.
One of you will be doing one thing, and the other person something to help them, and it’s always varying what you do.
It’s not like Brothers a Tale of Two Sons, or Kuri Kuri Mix.
Animal Well
Reminds me of old Spectrum platform games, like Jet Set Willy or Dynamite Dan. Only with better controls.
Sort of Metroidvania. Not overly difficult for the most part, although some bits took me a fair few attempts. Lots of secrets and hidden areas.
Made by a single developer, Billy Basso, who sounds like a comic book character, but a British one who says things like “cor, eh readers?”
Because you could use the Linux one to save the file unencrypted because it’s not locked down.
No vibration is a strange choice given that Nintendo and Sony went out of their way to make that much better in recent years.
Lack of trackpad is more understandable. Sony have had that for two generations now, and I’ve never really seen it used as anything other than a big Select button. I bounced off the Steam Controller simply because games designed for controllers feel much better with thumbsticks. If I want to play a mouse controlled game like Civ, I will use a mouse. Even from my sofa.