The new solution has a chatbot delving into whipping strategy and toadying the whippers.
The new solution has a chatbot delving into whipping strategy and toadying the whippers.


Still cute <3


I run the Windows build on Lutris just fine. You might have to cut the network for a few seconds during the launch (after you press “start game” in the launcher, before it loads the title screen)
Carry slot limits annoy me more.
Weight makes sense from a story perspective. Even a top-spec fighter can’t carry four zweihanders and 500 food rations.
But even the 1-STR mage who might have a legitimate carry weight limit of 2kg, should not be told “you can only carry 3 different types of 10-gram herb.” Especially if he’s allowed to carry 200 units of any one of the types. Give me anything resembling a viable story-based reason for that.
But selling a solution to that is a very popular monetization paradigm for MMOs, so it stays.
Invite your friends for “bonus” resources, or even worse, to unlock progression.
If you want to incentivize me to growthhack your product, let’s talk dollars, not Mystic Sunshine Gems.


The PS3 hard drive wasn’t propriatery. It was a normal 2.5" SATA drive; I took the old 120Gb SSD from a laptop and slid it in my 40Gb fat unit. Still noisy though.


You’d think it’s an industry they’d love to be out of, with the whole “sell at a loss and hope to make it back on games” business story.
The appeal of console hardware used to be that you could offer a tightly optimized experience with fixed hardware. The SNES outgamed a nominally higher spec 286/VGA PC because devs could use every gimmick and know it would work. But now the Xbox product matrix looks like a Taco Bell menu and console games are sprouting PC-style settings menus and inconsistent behaviour.
To preserve some brand value, I could see selling some sort of software pack or licensing system to motherboard makers-- your next PC will have an “Xbox Gold” badge on it and maybe a desktop icon or hotkey to boot into some cut-down Xbox OS.


Use MCUs that can be programmed over straight USB.


On a high level, you can get a cleaner like Deoxit D5 in a spray bottle. Most pots have a slit in them so you can spray into them, then turn the pot through its range a bunch of times. It’s worth a try as a start. Obviously do it while the unit is unplugged.
If you want to consider a more aggressive rebuild, like a capacitor replacement, maybe find a cheap old amplifier at the thrift shop to use as practice for desoldering/resoldering.
You might be able to connect the BT to one input on the amp, like the tape input, and the CD to another.
I was mostly disappointed Lord Harkon wasn’t.


The Orville has a great take on it too.
There’s an episode where they bring in someone from a scarcity-era planet and she’s freaking out about how they have replicators and future medical tech, and the crew explains to her that if the technology were airdropped on her world, thry wouldn’t be socially ready for it and it would just become a means of further stratification.
I’m thinking that even if they want to knock the building down, they could at least part it out. Look at those windows in the wreckage pile! I’m sure there are dozens of small museums around the country who would love to have an authentic White House window to show bored fourth graders on field trips.
Or, gild them and hand them out as party favours to your donors, as would more befit the architect.
I think this instance does something weird with images. It was a ~4MB JPEG on the device, but when I downloaded it again, I got a webp listed at ~750kb, but it absolutely crawls to download. I just uploaded a 2000x1500 JPEG (~230k on disc) to Imgur to fix the performance.
Yep. Been riffing on the PCB for a few years, so now I have seperate units for home and work wuth different cases.
Arataki Itto.
Yeah, the personality would be abrasive but he was basically the first hunk-coded character in the game.
This is actually my second one; a friend purloined my first one upon discovering the ergonomic charms of oni-boobs.


I see a Roadmaster wagon. To the used-games store!
It can’t be a real “as seen on TV” product because they didn’t use the phrase “in the palm of your hand”.
One day they’ll need to sell a larger product and be forced to hire actors with freakishly gigantic hands.
Some mainboards have very few PCI-e slots.
I ended up with a similar adapter because the onboard SATA on my board was flaky with optical drives and I rip CDs.
Lexmark was originally spun off of IBM’s printer and keyboard division in Lexington, Kentucky. You saw a lot of their printers sold with cheap home computers around the turn of the century; they leaned heavily into the “$39 inkjet printer with $75 cartridges that used all three colours to make black” business model, and were largely squeezed out of the home market by customers who didn’t buy their second printer from them. It feels a bit of a throwback to see the name now, but they retreated to the commercial market.
The keyboard division was further spun off into a firm called Unicomp, who still builds derivatives of the quality “Model M” keyboards they sold on the old PS/2 machines.
Most full-range manufacturers make servicable printers, as long as you go high up enough in the product line that they’re selling to businesses that care about duty cycles and maintenence costs, although I think at some point you reach units that are sold as an ongoing service arrangement with on-call staff instead.
I always figured they should have gone towards custom architecture as a product.
This would have dovetailed well with the Itanium-driven extinction of a lot of high-end architectures. If you can get one more generational upgrade for some bespoke platform running MIPS or M88k or whatever, you might pay $10k per chip instead of conpeting with commodity x86.