stardreamer
It doesn't have to be turn-based. FFXI and FFXII are also great. I feel the bigger issue is that making a story heavy game while everyone else is also making story heavy games makes it no longer unique.
I wouldn't mind going back to ATB, but I don't think that would win back an audience except for nostalgia points.
Maybe more FF:T though? Kinda miss that.
You can build a risc core using an fpga. Plenty of people have done that.
Performance will probably be an issue.
Bitwarden has TOTP support with a pro license. Or you can just selfhost (using vaultwarden) and have all the features instead.
according to a detailed writeup of the event by Doug Madory, a BGP expert at security and networking firm Kentik.
What's a ”BGP expert”? Most of this stuff is covered in an undergraduate networking course. Wouldn't just "networking expert" do?
And I'll be sure to let them know that I use windower add-ons and DAT mods when playing FF11. Maybe they'll ban my PS2/PlayOnline from any future updates?
Pros of working in an office:
- clear separation of work and home
- can easily ask coworkers next to you for a second opinion on things
Cons of working in an office:
- commute
- coworkers casually ask you for a second opinion on everything
I think we may be looking at these wrong. Yes there's a visible throughput/latency improvement here but what about other factors? Power savings? Cache efficiency? CPU cycles saved for other co-running processes?
These are going to be pretty hard to measure without an x86_64 simulator. So I don't fault them for not including such benches. But there might be more to the story here.
"Have you considered there is something more to life than being very very very very, ridiculously good looking?"
"Like murder?"
Uh oh. I used to work University IT. I can only imagine the number of tickets this would generate:
"Bad wifi at XYZ hall"
"Request to setup private router in dorms due to bad wifi"
"Please fix my computer I've heard this patch breaks wifi" (meanwhile, the reporter never installed said patch)
Having a good, dedicated e-reader is a hill that I would die on. I want a big screen, with physical buttons, lightweight, multi-weeklong battery, and an e-ink display. Reading 8 hours on my phone makes my eyes go twitchy. And TBH it's been a pain finding something that supports all that and has a reasonably open ecosystem.
When reading for pleasure, I'm not gonna settle for a "good enough" experience. Otherwise I'm going back to paper books.
Out of curiosity, what's preventing someone from making a regulatory db similar to tzdb other than the lack of maintainers?
This seems like the perfect use case for something like this: ship with a reasonable default, then load a specific profile after init to further tweak PM. If regulations change you can just update a package instead of having to update the entire kernel.