

Given their boner for AI, I don’t think Windows 12 stands a chance in hell of being even remotely decent.


Given their boner for AI, I don’t think Windows 12 stands a chance in hell of being even remotely decent.


AI strikes again.


Only works if it’s an incandescent light, but…
Flip one switch. Wait a few minutes. Flip it off.
Flip the second switch and go into the room.
If the light is on, it’s the switch you flipped most recently. If the light is off but warm, it was the first switch. If it’s off and cold, it’s the switch you didn’t touch.
I have a binder about that size of cards of approximately that generation. I should check what it’s worth.


Even better! Thanks for pointing those out.


Well, I’ll take Manifest v3 over AI, so I guess I’m switching to Vivaldi.


This year was a good year for games.
Hades II is a fantastic roguelike that sucked me in for weeks.
I got convinced to play Project Zomboid by a couple friends. I get the hype now.
Project Diablo 2 is an excellent revival of LoD with rebalancing, new features, and controller support. So much fun on the deck.
Pirate Yakuza in Hawaii was yet another great addition to the off the rails nonsense that is the Yakuza series.
Yakuza 0 Directors Cut was also a good remaster and English dub. People shit on Yong Yea as Kiryu but I like his performance. Could be because I never played the game in Japanese.
Also spent a lot of time playing Subnautica. An oldie but a goodie, especially with a multiplayer mod.
Yup, this was a good year for gaming.
EDIT: Oh! Can’t forget Ninja Gaiden: Ragebound. Pretty fun, challenging but sometimes a bit cheap in the challenges. One optional challenge relied on firing a knife through a narrow gap, but there was no reliable way to line yourself up. And since it was timed and at the very end of the challenge, if you mess up you have to do the whole thing all over again. Other than that, really fun.
What are you even trying to say?


You don’t.


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Happened in Saskatchewan too from what I’ve been told.


If you use company resources they absolutely can claim ownership on whatever you create. That much I do know. Though to be fair I’m in Canada so our laws will definitely differ in some ways.


I’m just glad to live in a country where companies don’t get to own people.


Like, things you work on during your personal time, using personal resources, belongs to your employer?
That sounds illegal. I don’t know where you live but that does not sound right.


Monday rolls around, they’ve finished like four of them. “Why won’t this kernel work?! NO, for the last time I’m not using genkernel! It’ll be a bloated mess.”


This is huge! Guess I’m gonna throw another hundred hours at the game.
Is there anywhere else? I swear they look for carpet when they need to puke. If you have a single carpeted room in a house full of laminate, they’re running to that damn carpeted room to blow their gut’s airlock.
Where does the sound come from? Your headphones, speakers, etc. Does it ever happen when your machine is off? You mentioned you only have wired audio peripherals - perhaps someone is playing a prank on you and has connected some kind of device inline.


But why?
Set up your.dns.address to point to your public IP
Port forward necessary traffic to your machine on your local network
Set up a hairpin NAT rule on your home router so that when you try to access your public IP from inside your own network, it redirects as necessary