I don't know whether it's the case here (it's the biggest sale of the year regardless), but often game developers will have licenses for some of the content in the game (music, most often), and when those licenses are soon expiring they do a fire sale on it. The previous Forza Horizon game comes to mind.
That article is so bad. While still debatable, what he actually said wasn't anything like it's been represented.
On Debian 12 we could simply install the backport kernel and the performance issues were solved.
Psychonauts 2, 90% off.
Psychonauts 2 is 90% off. Though it's not Steamdeck verified it's Linux native and should run pretty well.
Error: Your new password cannot be the same as your previous password.
If you offer "recommended dishes", you should probably be accounting for different kinds of food items to enable that. I wouldn't say the pure machine learning aspect is necessarily directly at fault, but the end to end implementation is bad.
Yeah, of course that doesn't mean it's good machine learning though 😆
What will stop them is complexity and effort. Legal risk has proven to not be enough yet.
I doubt GitHub will make an effort to avoid violating less common licenses anytime soon. Once you have found a license that works for you, the best thing you can do is find alternative hosting for your code.
Maybe the best way to fix this shortfall is TO REMOVE DEI AND MAKE BETTER GAMES. Crazy, I know.. But just a thought.
Are they being ironic? Jfc
That's not how international taxation works.
I hate to disappoint you, but the EU and OECD had already dealt with it 10 years ago and it was fully phased out by 2020. Look at what happened to Meta and Google's domestic corporate tax numbers that year to get an illustration. It's expected to continue to shift in the coming years as companies are moving intellectual property to the US from Ireland.
Real bad time to be trying to get a new studio off the ground.
it's not like heaps of people are clamoring to use alternatives.
I wonder if there's a causal relationship there 🤔
My money's still on Denuvo being the root cause.
In absolute terms, Boomers didn't get more conservative as they aged, they got more liberal. Just at a much slower rate than the younger generations.
There are tax efficiencies for them being here, but they actually have a sizeable staff presence too. Of all the tech companies in Dublin, they're the ones I'd most like the opportunity to work with.
Looking for an immutable desktop distro
I've been running stock Fedora for about 5 years, but I'm really interested in immutable distros after putting Bazzite on my TV Gaming PC. Batteries-included works well for me in a use case like that.
I have about a decade of experience with containerisation, so leveraging that experience for my desktop is really appealing.
I took a look at Bluefin for my laptop, but it seems to be more opinionated than I'd like. I'm good with having an optimised kernel and tooling that makes sense for an immutable distro, but wasn't a huge fan of preconfigured Gnome extensions and the software I don't want.
I haven't tried Silverblue yet, but I plan to do that next. Vanilla OS is on my list too, but more out of curiosity in how it does things.
My questions are: should I be looking at any other distros? Do I need to shift my expectations of an immutable distro even more?