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When all the humans you’re “supposed” to open up about your mental health to charge hundreds of dollars a session, need to be booked months in advance and cause you to miss work because their hours of operation are less than yours, and you need to actively convince them you’re suffering or else they dismiss you, yeah I wonder why.
Tiny Core Linux? I’ve never used it but I’ve seen videos of it running really well on super old machines. Like this one.
Damn, so someone sat down and encoded each line of assembly (I assume?) into machine code. Manual assembling and linking. Early years of computing was on a whole other level.
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Waymos loitering on your property? All I see is free scrap metal, catalytic converters, and expensive cameras and sensors being delivered to you! /s
Might be to prevent the SD card from running out of write cycles?
Maybe I’m just a young whipper snapper but I don’t get why people would want cartridges when freely copying the files to the main drive is an option since this would only work with DRM-free games. Cartridges were historically used instead of floppy disks or optical disks for DRM as you can make them basically impossible to duplicate. Even now the only reason Nintendo still sells cartridges is to allow the same game to be played in different devices with different logged in accounts while ensuring there is only one copy available between them.
And so with that in mind the basic idea is that you grab DRM free games (from stores like GOG), and pop them onto SD Cards to turn them into cartridges that Kazeta will detect.
So now instead of storing games on the computer itself, you have to go out of your way to put them on individual SD cards?
Also, is it strictly one game per SD card? That would be pretty wasteful of the available space for smaller games.
I noticed a lot of non-technical people using ChimeraOS/SteamOS getting lost in Steam’s complex menu structure and struggling with basic things like launching and closing games
I feel like someone who’s so nontechnical they can’t even figure out Steam’s UI, which is developed by a massive company with dedicated UX engineers and comprehensive QA for all their software, would probably also not be able to figure out installing a Linux OS, especially one that doesn’t boot into a normal GUI by default. It also assumes they will have a dedicated computer just for console style gaming, which nontechnical users probably wouldn’t bother with. Unless they plan on selling devices with their OS preinstalled as dedicated game consoles?
Also, you still have to interact with GOG to get the games. And also be able to find the app data direcrory GOG downloads games to in order to put them onto an SD card.
This also directly contradicts a quote later in the article: “Kazeta is definitely not for everyone. It requires a bit of work to get started”
I became disenchanted with digital storefronts and have come back around to appreciating physical media: game cartridges, CDs, DVDs
I have gotten more and more into collecting old physical games and systems and found them to be a much more pleasant experience than what modern gaming offers
Fair enough if you just want physical media in general, but I feel like people collecting physical media would specifically want ones branded by the company and not generic SD cards.
I have become more and more concerned with preserving my digital game collection for play in the future.
Bur there’s things in between digital storefronts and physical read-only media. Why not just have a special directory on the desktop that autodetects games copied into it? I assume that’s basically what happens when you insert an SD card with a game on it.
If you want to keep games atomic and prevent corruption of the directory structure, why not just support game directories in the form of tar or zip files and automatically mount them as a virtual filesystem?
keeping your games untouched and preserved forever
Don’t flash based storage put your data at risk of corruption if you leave it unpowered for too long? Having the games on the SSD you have powered every day sounds like it would be safer.
Though at least the flash’s write cycle limit wouldn’t matter with read only cards.
So is the code, like, punchcards? Or is it actual hand written text?
The original MIT license was selected without deep forethought, primarily to make the code easily auditable
What? Wouldn’t ANY open source license make it easily auditable?
Anything less than crucifixion is a mercy for the Nazis
Why? I don’t drive and don’t have a car but I can’t imagine the car itself not already having the exact same features since modern cars already have what is essentially a tablet built in.
Also, why not just have one of those phone holders on your dashboard like people have been doing before car integration was a thing?
Are those actually the only things you find lacking? If so that’s really good, practically the same as using LineageOS without any Google services.
I don’t use any of the stuff you mentioned and might have to consider Linux mobile as a daily driver if it’s that good. Especially if Google kills custom ROMs, it sounds like the people already running them would feel right at home switching to Linux mobile.
More importantly, how’s the app situation? Can people generally expect most of the desktop GTK or Qt apps they’re familiar with to be usable on a phone form factor? Is there a reliable way to run Android APKs on regular Linux now? At the very least F-droid apps?
And they wonder why people block ads.
At least Americans can discuss theirs openly.
Lol have you seen what’s been happening to pro Palestine protestors? BLM protestors? Anti Trump protestors? Julian Assange? Edward Snowden?
maybe we should hold a vote to defederate from them
More options is more good. The beauty of the open source community is different offerings of the same product catgory directly benefit each other instead of competing. Looking forward to running Cosmic system apps on KDE.
We have an ice free sea port to the Pacific, and ones in the Atlantic.
If you’re wondering, it’s literally just an embedded webpage of the AI vendor as a sidebar with a single button that pastes the entire contents of the webpage you’re on for the AI to give you a summary. So they basically just saved you the arduous effort of checks notes “ctrl+a ctrl+c ctrl+n <domain of ai vendor> enter ctrl+v enter.”
This reeks of “management demanded it when none of the developers wanted to add it.”