My uncle told me he sailed through the Bermuda Triangle all the time. I thought he was full of crap.
My uncle told me he sailed through the Bermuda Triangle all the time. I thought he was full of crap.
They should have just made more trash robots.
You left a window open somewhere near your thermostat.
“Lefty Loosey righty tighty”
One arrow points up to the left, one points down to the left.
There are also video games in libraries, and there are books in libraries with components that are unusable these days. Nobody is required by law to support these components in perpetuity. Nor is any publishing company required by law to maintain support for a book in perpetuity in any way.
Nor is anybody required by law to help you fix your classic car. People with classic cars spend tons of money to find spare parts or even get them manufactured. This is despite the fact that cars are much more of a necessity than video games.
Likewise, if you paid a video game to keep their servers open, or paid them for their source code, they’d give it to you. If you paid a smart person to reverse engineer the network protocol and write an equivalent server, you’d have your part.
Yes, and if you don’t like it you don’t have to buy them. It’s why I prefer not to use Steam.
If games have to be playable in perpetuity, then you can’t buy a game that isn’t playable in perpetuity.
But what is also unreasonable is needless, always online DRM that shuts down one day.
There are lots of video games without forced online DRM, and video games aren’t a necessity. You can simply stop buying games from these services and let people who don’t care about such things continue to buy them.
So you want to legally require game companies to “preserve history” in perpetuity, unlike every other kind of company in existence?
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The second sentence isn’t true.
What SKG does is mandate that your purchased product be technically possible to be usable in perpetuity, or refund the cost of it.
That’s a ridiculous requirement. If you want to buy games that are playable in perpetuity, buy games that are playable in perpetuity.
But the whole market isn’t shitty rip offs.
You don’t need to be protected from video game sales, you need to be protected from fraudulent game sales, that’s it.
If you want to buy a game that runs on proprietary servers that will shutdown one day, you should be allowed to do that.
I don’t know. Was he adopted?
An English couple adopted a German baby. By the age of two, he’d yet to talk.
They took him to specialists, but they could find nothing wrong with the boy.
By his seventh birthday, his parents had given up hope. But that morning while he ate breakfast, he spoke clearly: “Mother, Father, my strudel is a bit tepid.”
They were astounded and overjoyed. “You can talk!”
“Yes of course” said the boy.
“But why haven’t you said anything before?”
“Up to now everything has been quite satisfactory.”
You just solved history.
That depends, is he a black Democrat?
Rust crates have the second and third problems.
Rust at least has type annotation.
The type has private fields. There’s no constructor. There’s no implementation of the From trait except on itself. You can’t find a function anywhere that returns the type.
That’s not a bad idea.