The difference is that blood relatives can sit on their parents' legacy because of inheritance. Other editors need to survive based on the merit of their work.
Gee-whiz games where the point is the ability to project near-reality graphics, you are right.
But games on the level of Stardew Valley, Minecraft, or a Zelda adventure are about the playing experience. It has never been about ever escalating gee-whiz hardware upgrades in your 'rig.'
Your 'rig' is safe. There are still boomers out there scattering Harley parts all over the road. Your lifestyle choice for gaming is safe. It's probably not the future of mainstream gaming, tho.
It will render perfectly as a PDF with the bonus that they won't be able to mess with it. Their revisions will come back as change requests, not an additional hidden layer of formatting ready to explode into a mess because they used a slightly different version of Misrosoft's binary to revise it themselves.
In a lot of modern businesses, they actively seek to scrub out and remove 'power users' and their arcane non-documented work methods. If a work process isn't documented and under revision control it needs to be removed. The layers of barnacled 'legacy' that Microsoft counts on their 'power users' retaining in muscle memory can and will be scrubbed out by the ISO-9000 auditors.
Is there really a firmware write protect screw now? That might cinch it for some of us who don't consider a piece of hardware broken in and usable until the warranty is voided. (A lot of us here are nerds, who know that the only thing repair depot twits hold over us is arcana that hasn't yet been revealed.)
This topic really does get you upset. Work on not letting your fear force a reversion into scat. It would improve the quality ofvyour arguement.
The subject matter hasn't degenerated to conducting business on sketchy little wikis, btw. That's apparently just your projection.
What ever sort of little Microsoft Valued Partner logo, you are allowed to display on your business vcards, don't fret so much. There are still people in wingtips working for IBM. Your livelihood isn't threatened. Much. Yet.
The ASR-33 I used in High School would have been affordable, but a hassle to keep running, 15 years ago. The HP minicomputer on the MERITS timesharing network would have been more of a challenge but probably attainable. Getting a good fresh source of enough yellow punched tape to save my programs and data onto would probably be the deal breaker.
WTF? My questions have turned me into a Windows shill?
The days of strident little linux martinets extolling the true religion of linux over Micro$oft are over. This is about Google muscling in on Microsoft's game, if anything.
I know what my wife uses her laptop for. 95% of it she could do on a Chromebook. The killer right now would be Java Minecraft. Microsoft owns Mojang, though, and I suspect there will never be a Minrcraft port to the Chromebook. That's specifically a good reason for Microsoft taking over Mojang.
The threat to that comes from powerful gaming consoles.
It's a split thing. None of your gaming bros care if their min-maxing is done in an MS Office or a Google Docs spreadsheet. If they min-max collaboratively, its in shared spreadsheets on Google Docs.
I read that the first time as Armature Doctor and wondered that there would be magazine about repairing phonograph arms.
The difference is that blood relatives can sit on their parents' legacy because of inheritance. Other editors need to survive based on the merit of their work.
The 3.5mm jack is a heck of a useful analog hole.
Apple has been ramping up their Apple Music online service.
Hmmm.
That depends on what kind of gaming you mean.
Gee-whiz games where the point is the ability to project near-reality graphics, you are right.
But games on the level of Stardew Valley, Minecraft, or a Zelda adventure are about the playing experience. It has never been about ever escalating gee-whiz hardware upgrades in your 'rig.'
It's so insidious that an instance involving MC data trafficing a number of years ago has been uncovered.
That's irrelevant to gamers whose main leaderboard is an unofficial FPS ranking.
Your 'rig' is safe. There are still boomers out there scattering Harley parts all over the road. Your lifestyle choice for gaming is safe. It's probably not the future of mainstream gaming, tho.
It will render perfectly as a PDF with the bonus that they won't be able to mess with it. Their revisions will come back as change requests, not an additional hidden layer of formatting ready to explode into a mess because they used a slightly different version of Misrosoft's binary to revise it themselves.
In a lot of modern businesses, they actively seek to scrub out and remove 'power users' and their arcane non-documented work methods. If a work process isn't documented and under revision control it needs to be removed. The layers of barnacled 'legacy' that Microsoft counts on their 'power users' retaining in muscle memory can and will be scrubbed out by the ISO-9000 auditors.
Is there really a firmware write protect screw now? That might cinch it for some of us who don't consider a piece of hardware broken in and usable until the warranty is voided. (A lot of us here are nerds, who know that the only thing repair depot twits hold over us is arcana that hasn't yet been revealed.)
This topic really does get you upset. Work on not letting your fear force a reversion into scat. It would improve the quality ofvyour arguement.
The subject matter hasn't degenerated to conducting business on sketchy little wikis, btw. That's apparently just your projection.
What ever sort of little Microsoft Valued Partner logo, you are allowed to display on your business vcards, don't fret so much. There are still people in wingtips working for IBM. Your livelihood isn't threatened. Much. Yet.
The ASR-33 I used in High School would have been affordable, but a hassle to keep running, 15 years ago. The HP minicomputer on the MERITS timesharing network would have been more of a challenge but probably attainable. Getting a good fresh source of enough yellow punched tape to save my programs and data onto would probably be the deal breaker.
Mostly it would be about getting a full JVM running on the Chromebook. Which would open the platform to a lot of cool things.
A good question would be how fast Microsoft would start deprecating the java edition of Minecraft if it started to matter a lot.
WTF? My questions have turned me into a Windows shill?
The days of strident little linux martinets extolling the true religion of linux over Micro$oft are over. This is about Google muscling in on Microsoft's game, if anything.
Grow up.
Hey! Apple really does care about the Mac. They aren't ready to port Xcode to linux and shut it down just yet!
Another term for PC Gaming is the open hackable part of the XBox platform. Even Microsoft acknowledges that convergence.
The required bandwidth wasn't there back then.
What it offers consumers is a maintenance free platform that invisibly updates.
I know what my wife uses her laptop for. 95% of it she could do on a Chromebook. The killer right now would be Java Minecraft. Microsoft owns Mojang, though, and I suspect there will never be a Minrcraft port to the Chromebook. That's specifically a good reason for Microsoft taking over Mojang.
The threat to that comes from powerful gaming consoles.
It's a split thing. None of your gaming bros care if their min-maxing is done in an MS Office or a Google Docs spreadsheet. If they min-max collaboratively, its in shared spreadsheets on Google Docs.
Where the word 'shit' or 'shitty' appears, there is deep fear of change.
You had to prepend 'shitty' a few times there, out of fear. Don't let your fear cloud your judgement.
If Minecraft was ported to Chromebook it would end the market of Windows laptops for kids. Oh, wait, Microsoft bought Mojang!
Does Libre Office run on a Chromebook? Can I p,ug in a USB drive to install additional local apps? Can wine run on my Chromwbook?
Do the Republicans pay people like you to stink things up so much?
Christopher should get together with Brian Herbert.
They can fight about whose name goes first on the cover of their joint project books.
And we can decide if we want to read them or not.