I think the window manager is the best place to do this, not the display drivers or the game engines.
Mac OS X has a whole-screen zooming function, and probably the new X.org stuff too. Smoothing is configurable. Just start the game in a window, and have a black background around it. Then zoom in at whole pixel intervals until the game is as large as it can be on your monitor.
The whole equation only works out if it is guaranteed that the public's need to know always wins, and it is known that it always wins.
Then, there is always going to be pressure on information like this to be released, and hence it is always and only the fault of the bank if it breaks enough moral rules for the information to be forced out in the open. Morally, the bank is always the guilty party.
How would you feel if you were a customer of a bank, that bank turned out to be doing something illegal, and your private banking information were revealed publicly as a side effect of that?
Rightly, I would be angry at the evil bank that had caused exposure of my private information by being offensive enough for someone to break the code of conduct to defeat a greater evil. Morals and the sense of justice ought always to prevail - this is what the laws were for. Remember, spirit, not letter.
Very very true, but there's a problem with "innocent until proven guilty". It is that most people tend to take it to mean that "nothing is suspicious until proven guilty".
why is the current generation of games giving so much importance to the realism in graphic games?
You're looking at the wrong games. The realistic stuff is in the bulk market - which is composed of previous generations but with extra bells and whistles.
The actual current generation of games, IMO, are things like Braid, weird Flash games, Dwarf Fortress, Scribblenauts, Wii games. Where the innovation is. These don't have realistic graphics.
Except maybe Dwarf Fortress, which has very realistic, very low-resolution graphics.
The throttling, the turning to shit, of your Internet connections may allow someone new to enter the market. Maybe the dialup people can start competing.
If the market is healthy in your area, that is.
Is the market healthy? No? Why not? Can you do something about it? Can someone?
When you guys have answered that question, feel free to cap and throttle. As long as it's in a non-monopolistic environment, or one that has potential to not be monopolistic.
Btw - Thanks for sharing the config, VM parameter tuning is still a black art. (A fun little black art.)
Have you tried the JRockit realtime JRE? It is REALLY nice, it makes Eclipse feel snappier than most C++ programs on my box. It's a free download too. It's worth it if you can toss 100-200 extra MB at the IDE. Link: http://blogs.oracle.com/hirt/2008/08/running_eclipseworkshop_on_jro.html
That is a pretty well written article. Yup. Merlin Mann is a smart guy, and I've seen him be a bit over-nice, but now he's fed up and hitting back. And it's quite the lashing. And he's absolutely right.
i actually find all this scorn for Wikipedia and its mods/admins quite amusing.
there are lots of accusations of personal biases, clique-mentality, elitism, and other very human traits.
The point is that Wikipedia used to be more fun before the red tape took over. (Yes yes, I need a citation for that, I know.)
IMO - The personal biases, elitism and clique mentality used to fuel the article content itself: e.g., I am biased towards Ducati motorcycles; In the good old days, that means I'd write an article about Ducati motorcycles. These days I'd campaign to have the Triumph motorcycle page deleted.
Nexenta is basically the OpenSolaris kernel and the Debian/Ubuntu userland.
I think the window manager is the best place to do this, not the display drivers or the game engines.
Mac OS X has a whole-screen zooming function, and probably the new X.org stuff too. Smoothing is configurable. Just start the game in a window, and have a black background around it. Then zoom in at whole pixel intervals until the game is as large as it can be on your monitor.
So yes. Here's just a quick +1 on Boost and Qt.
I'll just be keyboard'ing in a quick reply here.
It's like car'ing and house'ing at the same time.
There was a discussion of borked SHA sums on the Talk page at Wikileaks. It had something to do with a server crash and a repaired file.
The whole equation only works out if it is guaranteed that the public's need to know always wins, and it is known that it always wins.
Then, there is always going to be pressure on information like this to be released, and hence it is always and only the fault of the bank if it breaks enough moral rules for the information to be forced out in the open. Morally, the bank is always the guilty party.
How would you feel if you were a customer of a bank, that bank turned out to be doing something illegal, and your private banking information were revealed publicly as a side effect of that?
Rightly, I would be angry at the evil bank that had caused exposure of my private information by being offensive enough for someone to break the code of conduct to defeat a greater evil. Morals and the sense of justice ought always to prevail - this is what the laws were for. Remember, spirit, not letter.
Very very true, but there's a problem with "innocent until proven guilty". It is that most people tend to take it to mean that "nothing is suspicious until proven guilty".
Yes, that was probably Ireland.
On another note, the news story you can see above is about ICELAND.
The police that are mandating the censorship are also owned by the government.
And to complete the farce, the newsroom being censored is ALSO OWNED BY THE STUPID GOVERNMENT.
why is the current generation of games giving so much importance to the realism in graphic games?
You're looking at the wrong games. The realistic stuff is in the bulk market - which is composed of previous generations but with extra bells and whistles.
The actual current generation of games, IMO, are things like Braid, weird Flash games, Dwarf Fortress, Scribblenauts, Wii games. Where the innovation is. These don't have realistic graphics.
Except maybe Dwarf Fortress, which has very realistic, very low-resolution graphics.
HTMLer and CSSer.
Or HTML guy and CSS dude.
If it seems disrespectful, IMO good HTMLers and CSS PPL get the respect they are due by way of tone of voice.
The throttling, the turning to shit, of your Internet connections may allow someone new to enter the market. Maybe the dialup people can start competing.
If the market is healthy in your area, that is.
Is the market healthy? No? Why not? Can you do something about it? Can someone?
When you guys have answered that question, feel free to cap and throttle. As long as it's in a non-monopolistic environment, or one that has potential to not be monopolistic.
Nice - Thought you might have!
Btw - Thanks for sharing the config, VM parameter tuning is still a black art. (A fun little black art.)
Have you tried the JRockit realtime JRE? It is REALLY nice, it makes Eclipse feel snappier than most C++ programs on my box. It's a free download too. It's worth it if you can toss 100-200 extra MB at the IDE. Link: http://blogs.oracle.com/hirt/2008/08/running_eclipseworkshop_on_jro.html
The story is the context and how it's put forward.
I despise the word "mashup", and people who use it too much, and the whole whiny hipster self-crucification feel of the discussion ...
BUT
Have you heard the infamous Cassetteboy records? They alone are worth all the hullaballoo about the genre.
Well put.
That is a pretty well written article. Yup. Merlin Mann is a smart guy, and I've seen him be a bit over-nice, but now he's fed up and hitting back. And it's quite the lashing. And he's absolutely right.
http://processing.org/
Clean, quick, cross-platform, can do pretty wild things right out of the box.
Make it fun, get them hooked.
Have you increased the heap size available to IntelliJ? Makes a big difference. Try 1 gig.
What is a DLC?
YES
The point is that Wikipedia used to be more fun before the red tape took over. (Yes yes, I need a citation for that, I know.)
IMO - The personal biases, elitism and clique mentality used to fuel the article content itself: e.g., I am biased towards Ducati motorcycles; In the good old days, that means I'd write an article about Ducati motorcycles. These days I'd campaign to have the Triumph motorcycle page deleted.
OK :)
Big up!
Shoes:
http://code.whytheluckystiff.net/shoes/
Try Ruby:
http://tryruby.hobix.com/
William Gibson books.
Garry's Mod.