Remember to never preorder.
Remember to never preorder.
Is that the game where you’re not allowed to discuss feminism?
Some cannabis dispensaries collect old/dead ones to recycle.
Final Fantasy Tactics Advance.
That’s definitely one game I don’t want my achievements shared on Facebook.
I heard Southwest Airlines is migrating from Windows 3.1 to Steam Decks.
I hope it’s a case of the writer glossing over details, like it corrupts its own files in a way Steam can’t understand or recover.
The implication that a malicious app can break the whole OS is scary.
Apple implemented a kernel API for security software and made it good enough that they forced their own tools to use the API.
MS’s own tools depended on kernel access but they tried locking out 3rd party vendors without building a replacement like Apple did.
McAfee and Symantec correctly pointed out how this would be using monopolist powers to block competitors.
Microsoft needs to shut up and do the work to make their kernel secure.
So that’s $50m gross against a development cost that’s probably twice that, right?
Big yikes.
So I have to buy $50 of DLC I don’t want in order to play this mod?
Windows was the reason I wouldn’t touch any Steam Deck competitors.
Would be excited to see some upmarket Steam Deck competitors that run Linux but I’m not spending my hard earned money on a computer that really belongs to Microsoft.
Does the mod need to be a lemmy.ca user, or does it federate?
Wikipedia lists the 780M as 35-65W so 30W sounds a little too optimistic.
Performance benchmarks for mobile parts are meaningless without power consumption data.
Doubling absolute performance in a handheld just means half the battery life unless they improve performance per watt.
GPU code is more amenable to high clock speeds because it doesn’t have the branch prediction and data prefetch problems of general purpose CPU code.
Intel stopped chasing clock speed because it required them to make their pipelines extremely long and extremely vulnerable to a cache miss.
My attitude around early access games is to buy them only if I would be satisfied with the game in its current state, at the price offered.
If you pay full price and go into it expecting improvements that may never come, you’ll be disappointed.
If you buy an incomplete game for cheap and they later expand it and raise the price, it’s a pleasant surprise.
Sure, I bought a NUC with a little integrated AMD GPU, which is more than enough for HTPC transcode duties.
It cost less than half this thing.
Devs have internal tools to eliminate the most annoying aspects like inability to respec and then forget players have to suffer with the base game.