Even then, since they bought out the Radeon Pro dev, quite some time ago, I still do doubt will grant Crimson will some of the same things. I.E The biggest being all those options related to Vsync, tripple buffering, and max render FPS
On one hand >"Insulting, demeaning, hateful, oppressive, exclusionary, or otherwise hurtful remarks." Is reasonable to ban. On the other hand, pointing out the code is garbage, or that the user keeps on making poor decisions and buggy code? Thats hurtful, and true. But it stacks up to a real issue: This isn't scary because how its written, its scary because of how it stacks up, and since its a Code of Conduct and not "how to post posts" advice.
Then there is the scariest bit of them all >Furthermore, if your conduct outside the Go community is against our values (below), it may affect your ability to participate within our community. This means if you are politically active, participate in ANY other online community where opinions is allowed, you can be barred from the mailing list or the forum.
Another one >Flirting with offensive or sensitive issues, particularly if they're off-topic; this all too often leads to unnecessary conflict. Which, when combined with the rest of the CoC reads as Do not make bug reports about know issue, do not supply patches for known issues. Do not bring up language flaws that can be fixed
And how will anything use that 32GB? At most you can use a RAMDISK, to speed up loading. Even outside of that, the trend of uncompressed assets and huge FMV files ruins that opportunity for newer games. The other problem is one of scale. If high end hardware can only run 1 billion polygons on screen, that sets a hard cap for how much data you can use of RAM. And 5-6 Billion polygons isn't a lot of space, since its going to be compressed anyhow. Textures runs into limitations like shader passes and cost of using textures. At some point in the GB range of RAM, the diminish returns exist, and i think we won't see anything go there until the next generations of consoles, unless they also hit diminishing returns.
Also, that isn't even the core problem. The problem is that other applications will copy the Chrome approach. At some point in a few years, it could be possible at all your applications are doing this. All of them. Even if all of them end up as the final version. Thats quite a few services to take over.
Education is certainly not free, but as it is done? Its not a cost. And thats a huge differences. Bonus points for a progressive tax system equaling low taxes for part time jobs.
The "option" is terms of "civilized foods" isn't better. There is Rice, Maize and Turnips. Then again, we have only been in modern times for the last 200 years. Thats only 3-5 consecutive full lifetime studies. Aging and the human body is already weird, our ability to digest food is even weirder.
Here is the simplest explanation: Once a object no longer reflects light properly, you can no longer tell what shape it has. You can only see its outline. If you rotate it, you have trouble seeing if it was rotated if the shape is uniform(i.e sphere) Muh comprehension is a shitty reason to use, because we need to see reflected light to see what shape a object has, and from there we can deduct whatever.
Lawsuit may have merits, but that doesn't may the lawyers will have anything to present. Regardless of what law is broken, there needs to be presented some kind of evidence. Otherwise you could open lawsuits to start investigations.
3G for mobile is shit, due packet loss and ping. Its not a good experience. 4G for mobile still has the same issue. And neither of them compete with 50/50 MiB/s broadband
Whats insane is how its presented. Since its a very deep case and all. In a society, there is a lot of things. Even ignoring how many social classes there are, and how they consume, consumers do not use a lot of energy. Most will go to food production, trade, production, mining, refining, assembly. Before "you" even have a chance of doing anything, most of the things that needs to happen goes in on several levels over you. Even something as basic as light, which brings significant industrial benefits to population. 90% isn't a insane number, but a without a actual non biased presentation on who will need to do the lifting, its just a useless number. I.E as effective boats are at transportation one wonders, should they not be able to reduce their fuel consumption 10-20x? But there is no will since things costs money.
Even billing is a issue. China want to become a first world nation. A part of that is a power grid, which enables some amazing industrial production, mining and refining of materials. China needs its power grid. China has been doing effort for years. They can't just replace their investments, that are still paying off their bills. Even for coal plants. Even if they could have had policies that wasn't so horribly third world in regards to air filters, smog, or sewer systems.
Yeah, but that has a delay of 1-3 generations(or 10-30 years if you prefer). A one child policy will have a lag of half a year to two years. And thats another thing to consider: Waiting is annoying for a ruler. Even for a democratically elected one.
You are oversimplifying it. Big improvements consists of large performance increases, less frame jitter, improved IO for loading, or changing the GPU/CPU load towards something more modern. Most of us have no idea what EAX really means, or if our hardware even supports it. 64 bit seems to be the most irrelevant thing ever, unless there is large performance gains for that port. Arm ports means you have to compile yourself. Ease of use is another one, and I think the original doom ports is the best example of this
>There are dozens of products that will give you everything you want Thats why one starts a argument like that by listing said products.
Examples would need to have a few specific qualities like: -Being able to run 480p/i without degrading quality -No input lag -Black and white levels -Saturnation levels So far, the first point is a very huge problem. LCD has no scaling capabilities, before you reach a 4-5x resolution. The second problem is a huge one, since there is no industry standard for it, so there is no way of avoiding it. BW levels can sorta be solved by OLED, which is neat. Saturnation levels is a huge problem. The general trend seem to be for LCD's to either low degrade on view angle, good saturnation, or okay white levels.
Motion blur still won't change the fact your input is laggy, and there are performance issues. If your turn your head, and the brain spots that the turning does not match what you see, there is a chance you get a headache right there after 2-3 goes at it. Motion blur on the other hand only smooths your perception of how "neat" the turning was. It doesn't change that your head spotted the 1-2 frames of delay, and you now get sea sickness.
In some nations the point to go was canceled because laws around crosswalks and parking changing. If I remember correctly, its because you where allowed to park at the edge of one in both directions, but regulation changed to a 6-8m ban of parking because it meant cars no longer blocked view of the pedestrians. That said, the legality is a mess for people driving without cameras.
If San Francisco laws are anything like Norwegians, pedestrians do always have right of way. No way of getting around it. Now, the issue of the pedestrian jumping from sidewalk into traffic(and who gets blamed for what there), the logical axiom of crosswalks being used as cross points, and more, is a different issue.
This sounds like a good idea until you realize there is thousends of thousends of thousends of adds out there. So every time you refresh a page, start your browser, or you go to the next part of a webpage, you would have to click everything. That adds up too a lot of time, compared to just blocking everything.
Well, its a pretty Japan thing. Its also why none of their consoles shipped with SCART for the default video out in Europa, from Super Nintendo to Wii.
That said, it looks like Nintendo of America is the biggest old war tent solider, since they refuse to go full localization mode, when they don't produce games themselves.
No, but you can kill what kills the battery. Examples: -App asks for something(GPS, lookup on the nearby cell tower, stuff), Battery Doctor forces the answer to be cached, to avoid activating the needed sensor every 10 seconds -Kills apps who makes background calls and are inactive
I think this is about right. There are several problems, and several good things: -200MB limit is a good thing. Downloading stuff tends to be painful in the first place, especially when you are used to a almost instant gratifiction that is the iOS and background downloads of apps. 200MB is also a lot looking from historical sizes: Games before the PS2 era was generally 40 to 100MB after compression(and the rest of CD's was filled up with uncompressed video), so 200MB can be a lot
-Cloud saves.... but also strict limitations on file size, so if its bad? Who knows
-The motion sensors in the applemote might be really good, but as with the Wii, that will not mean shit unless there exists 2-3 games out there to benchmark it. Wii had Wii Sports, Wii Resort+, and Skyward Sword. Out of a libary of about 1500 games(wikipedia claims so), you might be limited to about 30-40 games with strong proper usage of waggle. The rest of the libary seem to be limited to pointing, waggle for a button, or entirely different problems Seeing this is New Apple, there won't be any bundled showcase game which is fun, and sets a benchmark for how good waggle is suppose to be on this
-They already mandated a Xinput compliant controller, which I am not sure what to use for
-Applemote seems to be 2 motion sensors to a touch sensor on the top, meaning 1 button/dpad array + a lot of waggling
Even then, since they bought out the Radeon Pro dev, quite some time ago, I still do doubt will grant Crimson will some of the same things.
I.E
The biggest being all those options related to Vsync, tripple buffering, and max render FPS
On one hand
>"Insulting, demeaning, hateful, oppressive, exclusionary, or otherwise hurtful remarks."
Is reasonable to ban. On the other hand, pointing out the code is garbage, or that the user keeps on making poor decisions and buggy code? Thats hurtful, and true.
But it stacks up to a real issue: This isn't scary because how its written, its scary because of how it stacks up, and since its a Code of Conduct and not "how to post posts" advice.
Then there is the scariest bit of them all
>Furthermore, if your conduct outside the Go community is against our values (below), it may affect your ability to participate within our community.
This means if you are politically active, participate in ANY other online community where opinions is allowed, you can be barred from the mailing list or the forum.
Another one
>Flirting with offensive or sensitive issues, particularly if they're off-topic; this all too often leads to unnecessary conflict.
Which, when combined with the rest of the CoC reads as
Do not make bug reports about know issue, do not supply patches for known issues. Do not bring up language flaws that can be fixed
And how will anything use that 32GB? At most you can use a RAMDISK, to speed up loading. Even outside of that, the trend of uncompressed assets and huge FMV files ruins that opportunity for newer games.
The other problem is one of scale. If high end hardware can only run 1 billion polygons on screen, that sets a hard cap for how much data you can use of RAM. And 5-6 Billion polygons isn't a lot of space, since its going to be compressed anyhow. Textures runs into limitations like shader passes and cost of using textures.
At some point in the GB range of RAM, the diminish returns exist, and i think we won't see anything go there until the next generations of consoles, unless they also hit diminishing returns.
Also, that isn't even the core problem. The problem is that other applications will copy the Chrome approach. At some point in a few years, it could be possible at all your applications are doing this. All of them. Even if all of them end up as the final version.
Thats quite a few services to take over.
Education is certainly not free, but as it is done? Its not a cost. And thats a huge differences.
Bonus points for a progressive tax system equaling low taxes for part time jobs.
The "option" is terms of "civilized foods" isn't better. There is Rice, Maize and Turnips.
Then again, we have only been in modern times for the last 200 years. Thats only 3-5 consecutive full lifetime studies. Aging and the human body is already weird, our ability to digest food is even weirder.
Here is the simplest explanation: Once a object no longer reflects light properly, you can no longer tell what shape it has. You can only see its outline.
If you rotate it, you have trouble seeing if it was rotated if the shape is uniform(i.e sphere)
Muh comprehension is a shitty reason to use, because we need to see reflected light to see what shape a object has, and from there we can deduct whatever.
Lawsuit may have merits, but that doesn't may the lawyers will have anything to present. Regardless of what law is broken, there needs to be presented some kind of evidence. Otherwise you could open lawsuits to start investigations.
News at 11
3G for mobile is shit, due packet loss and ping. Its not a good experience.
4G for mobile still has the same issue. And neither of them compete with 50/50 MiB/s broadband
Whats insane is how its presented. Since its a very deep case and all.
In a society, there is a lot of things. Even ignoring how many social classes there are, and how they consume, consumers do not use a lot of energy. Most will go to food production, trade, production, mining, refining, assembly.
Before "you" even have a chance of doing anything, most of the things that needs to happen goes in on several levels over you. Even something as basic as light, which brings significant industrial benefits to population.
90% isn't a insane number, but a without a actual non biased presentation on who will need to do the lifting, its just a useless number. I.E as effective boats are at transportation one wonders, should they not be able to reduce their fuel consumption 10-20x? But there is no will since things costs money.
Even billing is a issue. China want to become a first world nation. A part of that is a power grid, which enables some amazing industrial production, mining and refining of materials. China needs its power grid. China has been doing effort for years. They can't just replace their investments, that are still paying off their bills. Even for coal plants. Even if they could have had policies that wasn't so horribly third world in regards to air filters, smog, or sewer systems.
Yeah, but that has a delay of 1-3 generations(or 10-30 years if you prefer). A one child policy will have a lag of half a year to two years.
And thats another thing to consider: Waiting is annoying for a ruler. Even for a democratically elected one.
You are oversimplifying it.
Big improvements consists of large performance increases, less frame jitter, improved IO for loading, or changing the GPU/CPU load towards something more modern.
Most of us have no idea what EAX really means, or if our hardware even supports it. 64 bit seems to be the most irrelevant thing ever, unless there is large performance gains for that port.
Arm ports means you have to compile yourself.
Ease of use is another one, and I think the original doom ports is the best example of this
So in other words: Its still just Doom 3 engine port, with no real improvements after being open sourced.
There is The Dark Mod.... and? I don't think any other standalone .pak exists.
>There are dozens of products that will give you everything you want
Thats why one starts a argument like that by listing said products.
Examples would need to have a few specific qualities like:
-Being able to run 480p/i without degrading quality
-No input lag
-Black and white levels
-Saturnation levels
So far, the first point is a very huge problem. LCD has no scaling capabilities, before you reach a 4-5x resolution. The second problem is a huge one, since there is no industry standard for it, so there is no way of avoiding it.
BW levels can sorta be solved by OLED, which is neat.
Saturnation levels is a huge problem. The general trend seem to be for LCD's to either low degrade on view angle, good saturnation, or okay white levels.
Motion blur still won't change the fact your input is laggy, and there are performance issues.
If your turn your head, and the brain spots that the turning does not match what you see, there is a chance you get a headache right there after 2-3 goes at it.
Motion blur on the other hand only smooths your perception of how "neat" the turning was. It doesn't change that your head spotted the 1-2 frames of delay, and you now get sea sickness.
Silly goose, thats why pedestrian heavy zones are 10-30km/h max.
And why driving without a dash car is legally unsafe for your wallet.
In some nations the point to go was canceled because laws around crosswalks and parking changing. If I remember correctly, its because you where allowed to park at the edge of one in both directions, but regulation changed to a 6-8m ban of parking because it meant cars no longer blocked view of the pedestrians.
That said, the legality is a mess for people driving without cameras.
If San Francisco laws are anything like Norwegians, pedestrians do always have right of way. No way of getting around it.
Now, the issue of the pedestrian jumping from sidewalk into traffic(and who gets blamed for what there), the logical axiom of crosswalks being used as cross points, and more, is a different issue.
This sounds like a good idea until you realize there is thousends of thousends of thousends of adds out there.
So every time you refresh a page, start your browser, or you go to the next part of a webpage, you would have to click everything. That adds up too a lot of time, compared to just blocking everything.
Well, its a pretty Japan thing.
Its also why none of their consoles shipped with SCART for the default video out in Europa, from Super Nintendo to Wii.
That said, it looks like Nintendo of America is the biggest old war tent solider, since they refuse to go full localization mode, when they don't produce games themselves.
Isn't that Capcom, SEGA and Konami? With their no games and Pachinko tables?
No, but you can kill what kills the battery.
Examples:
-App asks for something(GPS, lookup on the nearby cell tower, stuff), Battery Doctor forces the answer to be cached, to avoid activating the needed sensor every 10 seconds
-Kills apps who makes background calls and are inactive
I think this is about right. There are several problems, and several good things:
-200MB limit is a good thing. Downloading stuff tends to be painful in the first place, especially when you are used to a almost instant gratifiction that is the iOS and background downloads of apps. 200MB is also a lot looking from historical sizes: Games before the PS2 era was generally 40 to 100MB after compression(and the rest of CD's was filled up with uncompressed video), so 200MB can be a lot
-Cloud saves.... but also strict limitations on file size, so if its bad? Who knows
-The motion sensors in the applemote might be really good, but as with the Wii, that will not mean shit unless there exists 2-3 games out there to benchmark it. Wii had Wii Sports, Wii Resort+, and Skyward Sword. Out of a libary of about 1500 games(wikipedia claims so), you might be limited to about 30-40 games with strong proper usage of waggle. The rest of the libary seem to be limited to pointing, waggle for a button, or entirely different problems
Seeing this is New Apple, there won't be any bundled showcase game which is fun, and sets a benchmark for how good waggle is suppose to be on this
-They already mandated a Xinput compliant controller, which I am not sure what to use for
-Applemote seems to be 2 motion sensors to a touch sensor on the top, meaning 1 button/dpad array + a lot of waggling