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SkeuomorphicBee commented on Baldur's Gate 3 Steam Deck – Native Version   larian.com/support/faqs/s... · Posted by u/_JamesA_
slightwinder · 5 months ago
Oh, is that why steam still depends on trashy 32bit-libs? Last week, after updating my Debian, steam broke because of that s**, and now I have to think about using a separate windows-machine just for this, until steam removes the 32bit-dependencies (which seems to be planned for 2026).
SkeuomorphicBee · 5 months ago
On my Debian system I use the flatpack version of Steam, it comes with the 32bit stuff inside the container, so you don't need any 32bit packages in the OS.
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Most ints are not floats   johndcook.com/blog/2025/0... · Posted by u/zdw
sjrd · 8 months ago
Signed ints are also the integers mod 2^n. The beauty of modular arithmetics is that it's all equivalent. At least for all the operations that work in modular arithmetics in the first place. They just have different canonical representatives for their respective equivalence classes, which are used for the operations that don't work in modular arithmetics (like divisions, comparisons or conversions to string with a sign character).
SkeuomorphicBee · 8 months ago
Not in C. In C signed integer overflow is underined behaviour that may or may not be compiled to the equivalent of mod arithmetic dependingonthe whims of the compiler.
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Luck Be a Landlord Might Be Banned from Google Play   blog.trampolinetales.com/... · Posted by u/doppp
skyyler · a year ago
It's not simulating gambling any more than Peggle is simulating gambling.

It takes the aesthetic of a slot machine but there's no wagers. There's no gambling mechanic.

Are we really that blind to what gambling is that there are people that think playing poker without wagers is a form of gambling?

SkeuomorphicBee · a year ago
It is like chocolate cigarettes, they are not real cigarettes, they don't have nicotine nor smoke, and yet they serve to present and normalize real cigarettes to kids, so there is an argument for banning them. Where you draw the line is a difficult ask (a chocolate with packaging and wrapping copying exactly a cigarette pack seems like a clear case, but what about cylindrical chocolates that vaguely resemble? Probably not).

I think it is fair to argue where to draw the line, but I think some "looks like gambling but without gambling" do in fact deserve more scrutiny just because of the resemblance.

(On the other end of the spectrum we as a society should really crack down on the "doesn't look like gambling but is gambling" epidemic.)

SkeuomorphicBee commented on Bankruptcy judge rejects sale of Infowars to The Onion   nytimes.com/2024/12/10/bu... · Posted by u/jbegley
logicchains · a year ago
>money for Jones which he will use with even less restraint since he knows there are no consequences

He was fined over a billion dollars, in what world is losing a billion dollars no consequences?

SkeuomorphicBee · a year ago
He was fined a billion dollars, but it will never be collected, he never lost a billion dollars. With this decision all his debts are pardoned and he gets to keep his megaphone, that is very "no consequences".
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Porygon Was Innocent: An epileptic perspective on the infamous Pokémon episode   animefeminist.com/porygon... · Posted by u/Aissen
mmmlinux · a year ago
Serious question for epileptics. Are those failed LED flashing street lights an issue? I feel like they must be. Even to me they can be disorientating at night when the one flashing lamp on the exit ramp is the main light source.
SkeuomorphicBee · a year ago
I cant speak for epileptics, but I do suffer from photosensitive migraines (which the author briefly mentioned in the article), and in my case failing flashing LED lights are indeed an issue. Luckily for me it is not as instantaneous as a seisure, I feel it building up over many seconds, so in many situations I can just look away or close my eyes and it doesn't turn into a full blown migraine (just a kind of "hangover" in my head).
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Steam Families Is Here   store.steampowered.com/ne... · Posted by u/diggan
SkeuomorphicBee · a year ago
That is great. Now they just need to add a easy way to alternate between different profiles on the same computer, because having to log-out and log-in every time you want to hand the controller to someone else in the family is a big hassle.

I understand the now a days most people have their own computer, so the log-out/log-in is not a problem for most people; but some of us have a gaming desktop connected to the living-room TV that is shared by the whole family, and in this case a way to change profiles without having to do all the hassle of logout/login is really needed.

SkeuomorphicBee commented on The Lurker's Guide to Babylon5   midwinter.com/lurk/... · Posted by u/Tomte
smsm42 · a year ago
I think CGI-wise we are just spoiled by the multi-million dollar blockbuster CGI. For the time and the media their CGI is pretty good. And yes, it's not perfect, but completely adequate to the time I think. And I don't think the aliens looked "silly" at all - I saw much worse work on many shows, I think B5 had good variety and depth without going overboard - when you shooting over a hundred episodes, making designs that would take 12 hours for an actor to get into is going to be kinda hard. And to be honest, probably won't add that much to the show beyond the initial novelty moment.
SkeuomorphicBee · a year ago
> "For the time and the media their CGI is pretty good. And yes, it's not perfect, but completely adequate to the time I think."

I watched it then, and i can tell you that NO, it wasn't pretty good for the time nor the media, it was terrible even for that time. Not because their CGI was particulary worse, but because all CGI was terrible at the time. The technology wasn't ready yet to do much, so everyone else at the time relied on practical effects, miniatures, and built full set; but for practicality and cost reasons they decided to use the crude CGI of the time for many things that were not good enouth at the time, and it shown terribly.

In subsequent seasons they walked back that decision slightly, mostly abandoning CGI for indoor scenes in favour of building sets for their actors like everyone else. And the last few seasons had fairly good CGI for external shots of the station and ships, because by that time the tech evolved to be good enouth (that is when you start seeing such CGI being used in all other shows as well).

SkeuomorphicBee commented on Let's stop counting centuries   dynomight.net/centuries/... · Posted by u/surprisetalk
jonathan_landy · 2 years ago
Re temp, I’m glad we use F for daily life in the USA. The most common application I have for temp is to understand the weather and I like the 0-100 range for F as that’s the typical range for weather near me.

For scientific work I obviously prefer kelvin.

Celsius is nearly useless.

SkeuomorphicBee · 2 years ago
For me the best feature of Celsius, the one that makes it much better for weather, is the zero on the freezing point of water. Everything changes in life when water start to freeze, roads get slippery, pipes burst, crops die. So it is important that such a crucial threshold is represented numerically in the scale. In other words, going from 5 to -5 in Fahrenheit is just getting 10° colder, nothing special, while going from 2 to -2 in Celsius is a huge change in your daily life.
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Static arrays are the best vectors   mynameistrez.github.io/20... · Posted by u/bwidlar
tetromino_ · 2 years ago
The main disadvantage of this approach is that to free memory, you must terminate the program. This is fine for a program which runs for a second, but is unusable for long-running processes and servers where you want to free memory after finishing any memory-intensive task so that everything else that your machine is running concurrently gets memory too.
SkeuomorphicBee · 2 years ago
This is also fine for any long-running processes and servers where the "vector" in question is not expected to shrink its allocation, which I would guess is the main use of vectors. Shrinking a vector's allocation is a niche use, with some finicky APIs, that most programmers never needed or touched.
SkeuomorphicBee commented on Julian Assange granted permission to appeal against extradition to US   theguardian.com/media/202... · Posted by u/skilled
ledoge · 2 years ago
Court documents can be found here: https://www.judiciary.uk/judgments/assange-v-government-of-t...

Paragraph 210 of the judgment argues why the US's kidnapping/assassination plot is not a valid ground for refusing the extradition:

> [...] On the face of the allegations (on the evidence before the judge and the fresh evidence) the contemplation of extreme measures against the applicant (whether poisoning for example or rendition) were a response to the fear that the applicant might flee to Russia. The short answer to this, is that the rationale for such conduct is removed if the applicant is extradited. Extradition would result in him being lawfully in the custody of the United States authorities, and the reasons (if they can be called that) for rendition or kidnap or assassination then fall away.

SkeuomorphicBee · 2 years ago
What an utterly absurd judgment, that should have no place on a free society. They have a literal kidnapping/assassination plot, and yet the Judge considers it all above board and that it doesn't show any prejudice.

u/SkeuomorphicBee

KarmaCake day2193June 18, 2021View Original