March 2023 they sold 20M Quests. Half as many as PS5. That counts as "taken off" in my book.
I think I would have enjoyed this more, if I had played it earlier. But when I finally got around to playing it in 2021, the Multiplayer was dead and I had already seen too many pretty games for Journey to stand out.
I can see how someone would fall in love with at the right time though.
For any country that has benefited from exploitation of foreign resources "stolen" is a bit rich.
Google does indeed use Google Play Services to gate-keep the Ecosystem while keeping Android technically FOSS. Still better than Apple in this case, but hey... would you rather be hanged or beheaded?
My guess is that this tactical tornado here didn't know the difference between a span and a div
Very amusing. I still know barely anything about him, but I'm thoroughly convinced.
I would guess they implement the check against the response, not the query.
Can't believe this has to be explained, but a Journal is almost by definition something that you want to keep forever. Do you want to lock yourself into Apple devices forever? Have you ever heard of Nokia?
No export! This should raise all the red flags.
Kannst du aber meines Wissens nicht.
Bei BW weiß ich es nicht, aber zumindest bei Apple braucht man das Todeszertifikat und einen ausgedruckten Schlüssel.
Edit: Jetzt wo ich drüber nachdenke: Die Vertrauensperson muss ein Bitwarden Konto haben. Also denke ich, die verschlüsseln einfach asynchron die Zugangsdaten mit dem Public-Key der Vertrauensperson und laden das Ergebnis bei sich hoch.
Ich weiß nicht wie Bitwarden es macht, aber man kann trivial Schlüssel so verteilen, dass zwei Parteien nötig sind um den Tresor zu öffnen.
Naiver Ansatz frei aus dem Kopf: Verschlüssle deine Daten synchron mit Key A. Dann verschlüssle Key A mit Key B. Gib Key B an Bitwarden und den verschlüsselten Key A an deinen Notfallkontakt. Bitwarden kann dann Key B rausrücken sobald dein Notfalkontakt sich ausweißt.
Bitwarden macht das mit Sicherheit cleverer, aber das Beispiel sollte ausreichen.
3 Minute Reviews were good, but reviews are relatively easy to shovel out. Their essays were so bad, I started to actively avoid them.
The Anatomy of Sekiro comes to mind in particular. Competently structured but devoid of any meaningful observations.
It feels like these guys where working to meet a quota.
Reminds me of grace lees excellent essay on how dystopian absurdity like this happens. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7O5bBHLnCo
This referenced Video is probably a better source. Changes start at 2:40
One week in NL and I'm wondering what we're even doing over here.
Also they're just visually bad. The bubbles have way too much spacing. The low-contrast blurry bubbles make everything feel cluttered. When expanding a group, you'll see the same app icon repeated 20 times, while the headlines are clipped. The typography doesn't feel right: headlines are too large, text styles on individual notifications are too similar and the line heights are too small. The scheduled summary was a nice idea, but again it's blurred background on blurred backgrounds. And if all of that wasn't cluttered enough, let's make everything overlap at bottom.
Apple is usually really good at this, I don't know what this particular design team was smoking.
Es gibt eine kleine Datenbank mit genau solchen Spielen: https://nobsgames.stavros.io/
Mein persönlicher Favorit: Data Wing (kostenlos)
Building abstractions and tools to reduce busy-work has been the goal of computer science since the moment we created assembly. The difficulty lies in finding methods that provide enough value for enough use-cases to outweigh the cost of learning, documenting, and maintaining them. Finding a solution that works for your narrow use-case is easy - every overly eager junior has done it. However, building solutions that truly advance CS takes time, effort, and many, many failures. I don't mean to discourage you, but always be aware of the cost of your abstraction. Sometimes, the busy work is actually better.
So Apple is obviously an evil, profit seeking company that exploits users and developers, maintains a monopoly and actively hurts efforts towards openness.
But bro, what else am I gonna use? Do you think Google is any better.
And, as you already noticed, most open source alternatives suuuck. (Man, I'm gonna regret saying this on an FOSS community) With some research you'll get a usable desktop OS for some use-cases, but phones such as Fairphone and Purism are another story entirely. Don't even think about watches or tablets. I love the Purism Firefox demo, where they enthusiastically say: "With Settings unusable in Portrait, it's time to switch to landscape mode".
The "you think ... yet you buy ..." argument is pointless, because it ignores the realities of monopolies and globalism. I'm sure his T-Shirt that day wasn't made from ethically sourced cotton or whatever.