This is basically the plot of Breaking Bad.
- 0 Posts
- 26 Comments
cyd@vlemmy.netto Gaming@beehaw.org•What game do you think came closest to being "perfect"?5·2 years agoChrono Trigger. It’s basically the evolutionary peak of the NES-era console RPG. Every aspect, including the story, art, game mechanics, and music, are best-in-class, with no obvious room for improvement given the technical constraints of the time.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Google reminds us that Google Chat can be used with friends and familyEnglish4·2 years agoLet’s all be grateful that Google handled GChat and its successors so incompetently. There was a window of time in which the world might have gotten hooked into using Google for instant messaging, which would have been a privacy disaster. Lucky, they fucked it up.
Ultima Underworld
It came out before Doom, had full isometric 3D environments including looking up and down, and contained immersive sim and RPG elements. All the ingredients of a modern first person action RPG… in 1992.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•TikTok Keeps Removing Abortion Pill ContentEnglish20·2 years agoGiven TikTok’s precarious situation, it’s no surprise they’re going out of their way to bend to the whims of US politics. Face it, there are a lot of Republicans ready to justify banning TikTok by pointing to teenagers getting abortion advice from the platform.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•FediPact is an Organized Effort to Block Meta's ActivityPub PlatformEnglish5·2 years agoSure, just like you can run an SMTP server that blocks incoming connections from Gmail. It’s not illegal, obviously, but it goes against the spirit of an open, interoperable internet.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•FediPact is an Organized Effort to Block Meta's ActivityPub PlatformEnglish35·2 years agoTo me, the argument for accepting Meta into the Fediverse goes beyond gain and loss. What it boils down to is that if you run an Internet service, you have a moral obligation to make a good faith attempt to interoperate with anyone who’s using the protocol as intended.
By a similar token, if you run a mail server, you should accept SMTP connections as far as possible. Yes, you can ban spam, but you should not ban connections from Gmail even if Gmail is a privacy-destroying bad idea. By all means, allow individual users to set up their own block lists, but this should not be done at the server level.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Amazon named its “labyrinthine” Prime cancellation process after Homer’s IliadEnglish19·2 years agoShouldn’t it have been the Odyssey? By the time you unsubscribe, ten years have passed, nobody recognizes you, and your wife is fending off suitors.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Meta and Mastodon: What’s really on people’s minds?English7·2 years agoThe counter argument is that standardized open protocols are important. So if a big corporation moves to adopt a standardized open protocol, it’s a good thing for everyone, even if said corporation is sketchy, evil, or whatever.
It’s kind of like Microsoft’s adoption of XML for Office save files. Yes, they had ulterior motives, and the result isn’t completely satisfactory for third parties who want to parse the save data. But it’s still miles better than the previous situation where things were completely closed off.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Lemmy Federation Architecture Change ProposalEnglish1·2 years agoHow was syncing done in Usenet? It has a very similar decentralized model, and I don’t recall there being problems of data loss due to desyncing between servers.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Lawyers: Internal email proves Microsoft's Activision bid is designed to eliminate PlayStationEnglish9·2 years agoThat’s Microsoft’s playbook. If you don’t offer a better product than your competitor, pull out every dirty trick in the book to undermine them.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Gaming@beehaw.org•The only manned submersible that could reach the missing Titan is owned by Steam's Gabe Newell3·2 years agoMaybe he wanted to build Deepsea Challenger II, III, and IV simultaneously, and it took longer than expected.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•Reddit confirms BlackCat ransomware gang stole its dataEnglish21·2 years agoSpez won’t agree to the API demand, because it’s a matter of ego and credibility for him now. His whole big shot tech-bro CEO shtick depends on ramming this through, like his hero Elon.
So I guess we’ll see if there’s anything interesting in the corp data…
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•‘Miracle material’ Perovskite solar panels to finally enter production, 50% cheaper to produceEnglish6·2 years agoThey’re okay for niche applications, but the use case is pretty narrow: situations where you want high efficiency solar harvesting, but only for a limited period (because the material degrades). Oh, and you can’t use them for (say) cheap solar powered kids’ trinkets, because they contain lead.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Gaming@beehaw.org•50 Years of Text Games parses the rich history of a foundational genreEnglish2·2 years agoIt’s worth mentioning the Interactive Fiction Archive, a massive catalogue of hobbyist-created text games, many based on free text game engines like TADS.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Gaming@beehaw.org•Owner of Destructoid, The Escapist, Siliconera, and others Fires Writers and Hires for "AI Editor" to Churn Out Hundreds of Articles Per Week1·2 years agoI think it’s the other way round. AI writes, the human editor touches things up a little, and together they poop out hundreds of low effort articles a week.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•A storefront for robots: The SEO arms race has left Google and the web drowning in garbage text, with customers and businesses flailing to find each other.English8·2 years agoYeah, I tried for a long time to use DuckDuckGo, but honestly the results are worse than Google, even given the present day enshittified state of Google search. And it eventually just became too annoying.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•How Europe is leading the world in the push to regulate artificial intelligenceEnglish1·2 years agoThe regulation not only puts obligations on users. Providers (which can include FOSS developers?) would have to seek approval for AI systems that touch on certain areas (e.g. vocational training), and providers of generative AI are liable to “design the model to prevent it from generating illegal content” and “publishing summaries of copyrighted data used for training”. The devil is in the details, and I’m not so sanguine about it being FOSS-friendly.
cyd@vlemmy.netto Technology@beehaw.org•How Europe is leading the world in the push to regulate artificial intelligenceEnglish0·2 years agoWell, here’s my worry. From my understanding, the EU wants (say) foundation model builders to certify that their models meet certain criteria. That’s a nice idea in itself, but there’s a risk of this certification process being too burdensome for FOSS developers of foundation models. Worse still, would the FOSS projects end up being legally liable for downstream uses of their models? Don’t forget that, unlike proprietary software with their EULAs taking liability off developers, FOSS places no restrictions on how end users use the software (in fact, any such restrictions generally make it non-FOSS).
Went back and checked: Walter was 50 at the start of the series. The series spanned two years of in-universe time, and he died at 52.
Anyway, the point stands. Cooking meth is a valid shared interest for an older man and a younger man to bond over.