There are a bunch of free channels on the internet that some TVs can just stream without a dedicated app. These channels are supported by ads like cable/whatever channels, but not locked behind a subscription. VLC is supporting whatever formats they use to allow (or make it easier; IDK) people to watch them if they want.
The other part is that they're working on web assembly to allow sites to use VLC as their embedded video player.
If you don't immediately throw someone who doesn't flush off of your property to never return, you're nasty too.
The list of words in order also definitely is.
And a lot of them are trying to stay matched to the real one.
Discord supports threaded topic based formats as well.
The reality is that for a lot of interactions, a live chat feels better than a forum post. You can very easily do both on discord, though.
It's not perfect, but the alternatives that aren't a whole project by themselves building a tool don't have feature parity, or the user base.
"Monitors" are smaller.
And the minimum cost of entry to anything reasonably sized is double to triple. Changing some settings is well worth it.
It's really not.
In poor countries sure, but not the US or Europe. You will get sued and you will pay if you do that at any scale.
One company can't be a cartel.
It's decidedly not free if you have to buy physical products to get it.
The friction of a physical purchase is relevant.
But all the rest of the slot machine mechanics in terms of dopamine juicing sounds and animations are still there, and they're the biggest issue.
That's a loot box with extra steps. You get loot box physical trash and loot box digital trash. TCGs are the original microtransactions.
Now, the extra steps are a small barrier that makes it slightly less bad, because you have to physically go to a store or at least order and wait to get them. But it's not that much less bad.
No they didn't.
"You have to rebuy your games, that you can't play anywhere else" isn't just "not the best way". It's straight up horseshit with no possible way to be valid. It's also the biggest reason it tanked.
The only thing about stadia that was in any way redeemable was the fact that they didn't mess around and gave full refunds for any game purchase.
It's already proven. Repeatedly.
Nintendo and every lawyer involved should see obscene fines for the blatant harassment.
Emulation is not piracy.
There is an abundance of precedent that emulation is not copyright infringement and is not in any way illegal. You can absolutely make money on an emulator and there is absolutely nothing they can do.
Emulation has also been litigated to hell and is also very clearly legal.
It's a far cry better than Google or Amazon making you buy the game on their service specifically.
It's still cloud gaming. So it still sucks. But at least they're not trying to force you into a shitty locked in storefront. (Though not keeping your Steam login is definitely a pain point.)
There isn't guesswork involved. They know for certain that people will. They have network effect on their side. Their entire audience is captive. Anyone willing to leave already has after the hundreds of different "revelations" of how fucking disgusting everything they have ever touched is.
They aren't selling anything but your privacy. It's Apple's limitations on being overt malware that they'd be bypassing, and it is absolutely guaranteed that they would do so the literal minute they can.
Yes, it would.
They don't leave the play store because, and exclusively because, Google allows them to do anything they want. Apple does not. The literally exact day a similar law goes into effect in the US, it's an absolute guarantee Facebook leaves the App Store with every single app they have. There's not even the slight possibility they stay there.
Black flag, more ships/weapon paths, maybe some fleet commands for bigger battles, expand the shipping jobs thing to feel like you're really commanding a fleet.
Or none of that and just call it a pirate game.
If it was actually like Black Flag I'd be all over it.
But it's live service shit.
The other dumb part is that when their manufacturing capability does significantly improve, AMD will happily sell similar chips to other people. And Valve won't care in the slightest. Because all they want is people on PC so they buy games, many of which are through steam.
Linux being relevant is a bigger benefit to them than any revenue from the deck, and they've already demonstrated that it's capable of pretty much any game that doesn't actively exclude it.
Mayo was lured into coaching by Belichick in 2019 and became one of Belichick’s most trusted assistants.
One day after a mutual parting with the most decorated NFL head coach in history, the New England Patriots hired the man to succeed Bill Belichick. Jerod Mayo is set to become the 15th head coach in franchise history, according to league sources briefed on the matter who were not authorized to discuss it publicly.
An introductory press conference to formalize the move is expected for the middle of next week.
Mayo, 37, will become the NFL’s youngest head coach. His ascension has been long planned. The team never reached out to a single other person for the role, including hot names like Jim Harbaugh, Mike Vrabel or even Ben Johnson, per league sources.
The Patriots wrote into his contract last January that Mayo would succeed Belichick as the next head coach. Because they did that and because they communicated that with the league, they were not required to conduct a full coaching search following the Rooney Rule.
Even when well-known candidates became available this week, Robert and Jonathan Kraft stuck with their plan. They’ve been confident for over a year that Mayo will make a good head coach, and they didn’t deviate from that plan this week.
In March, Robert Kraft said that Mayo had “no ceiling” on his ability to coach. He called him an “heir apparent.”
Now the Patriots are just finalizing what they’ve long planned.
Why were the Patriots not required to interview anyone?
The Patriots were able to hire Mayo so quickly because of language in Mayo’s contract that was unknown before Thursday evening and because of stipulations in the league’s anti-tampering policy and Rooney Rule, which typically requires teams to conduct in-person interviews with at least two external minority candidates.
When the Patriots re-worked Mayo’s contract last year to entice Mayo to turn down head coaching interviews elsewhere, they established in writing that Mayo would be the successor to Belichick. They then communicated that with the NFL.
A condition in the Rooney Rule and anti-tampering policy allows teams to bypass the typical interview process if they establish in writing a succession plan and communicate that with the league before the start of the season. Three teams have made use of this provision before: the Baltimore Ravens in hiring general manager Eric DeCosta, the Indianapolis Colts in hiring former coach Jim Caldwell and the Seattle Seahawks with former coach Jim Mora Jr.
So the Patriots knew all along that they wanted Mayo to succeed Belichick. And they didn’t deviate from that plan even with big names like Harbaugh and Vrabel on the market. — Chad Graff, Patriots staff writer
Why do they like Mayo so much?
Simply put, everyone seems to gravitate toward Mayo. Mayo was drafted by Belichick with the No. 10 pick in 2008, then went on to be a team leader as a linebacker. He entered a locker room fresh off the team’s 2007 undefeated regular season that was filled with star players — and quickly earned their respect, becoming a captain his second season. When he was injured toward the end of his career, Mayo grew close with Steve Belichick, Bill’s son, and studied film with him.
He didn’t initially enter coaching after retiring as a player in 2015, opting to explore other interests including in business. But Belichick lured Mayo back because he was so impressed with Mayo as a player and thought Mayo had a calling to be a football coach. Now, it seems the 37-year-old is poised to succeed Belichick. — Graff