but yeah steam is nicer I agree, I just like drm free systems over steam
oh yeah definitely agree, especially now since everyone and their mother is an indie game dev.
> Guys I made this super awesome pretentious choose your own adventure story driven point and click game with retro pixel art graphics that hearken to the days of the SNES.
i haven't seen their contract, but it's possible they could disabled DRM if that were happeing. thta doesn't give everyone the right to hand out free copies
so my wrist is getting worse, I went back to the doctor, she agrees it should be getting better and not this painful. need an ultrasound. earliest they can get me in is a fucking month.
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Why is my push function not working whe...
A recent Stack Overflow blog post claims that:
With nearly five open jobs for every available software developer, the need for qualified technical talent is higher than ever.
I have seen this claim repeated many times, with different numbers cited, but I've not been able to get down to any ...
Awesome Electron Electron is the web-based desktop framework that was originally developed for GitHub's Atom editor. It seems to be catching on, so Sindre Sorhus is compiling a list of Electron applications in Awesome Electron. The list includes Monu by Max Ogden, which is a process monitoring menu bar application
@SomeKittens but they're mostly jersey girls around my age
@SomeKittens the kind of shop likely to have beer/pizza meetups is also likely the sort of place that doesn't have a consist, documented build procedure
or any kind of control around releases
generally the sort of place where everything is super insecure
we're working towards continuous delivery here, but that means we (dev) continuously deliver small changesets to QA, who continuously delivers them to compliance, who decides when and how they want to sign off on them
Verlet integration (French pronunciation: [vɛʁˈlɛ]) is a numerical method used to integrate Newton's equations of motion. It is frequently used to calculate trajectories of particles in molecular dynamics simulations and computer graphics. The algorithm was first used in 1791 by Delambre, and has been rediscovered many times since then, most recently by Loup Verlet in 1960s for molecular dynamics. It was also used by Cowell and Crommelin in 1909 to compute the orbit of Halley's Comet, and by Carl Størmer in 1907 to study the motion of electrical particles in a magnetic field. The Verlet integrator...