Beholder is a video game about a life in a totalitarian State. The game was developed by Warm Lamp Games and published by Alawar Entertainment.Beholder was released on Steam on November 9, 2016 and supports Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS.
== Story ==
Beholder is inspired by dystopian works of George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, and Ray Bradbury.
The main character – Carl – is a government-installed landlord in a totalitarian State. The State appoints Carl to spy on the tenants. The primary task is to covertly watch the tenants and eavesdrop on their conversations. A player can bug apartments...
@Neil It's easy to find the clear-cut cases. Bethesda or Blizzard vs. a one-man studio writing games in his living room. It's the middle where it gets blurry and also, I would say, meaningless.
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan well for the sake of not calling everything except monoliths like Bethesda or Blizzard "indie", lets just not call everything in the middle "Indie"
Indie games, like indie music, gives you some information, but not the whole picture. There's indie pop and indie FPS shooters, but it can tell you that a game or music might be less commercially-inclined, might take more imaginative chances that a commercial product won't.
@Wietlol No, I think you're narrowing it too much. Take a game like Slay The Spire. Fantastic game with 2 core developers and 3-4 additional team members on visuals and stuff. Definitely an indie game. But they opened a company - MegaCrit Studios - because they want to sell the game. And handle the money. And pay salaries.
> In the video game industry, an indie game or independent video game refers to those games typically created by individuals or smaller development teams without the financial support of a large publisher, - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indie_game
@Wietlol Which means that any conversation you have will be frustrating for everyone involved, just like if you used the term "first person shooter" to refer to games like Overwatch.
> Indie games are developed by individuals, small teams, or small independent companies that are often specifically formed for the development of one specific game. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indie_game
Indie games, like indie music, gives you some information, but not the whole picture. There's indie pop and indie FPS shooters, but it can tell you that a game or music might be less commercially-inclined, might take more imaginative chances that a commercial product won't.
@misha130 As I said about games, there are many songs that you can listen to and say "oh, this is obviously indie" - usually low-fi songs with limited technical production values, or a certain mentality. And there are songs that sound highly-produced and obviously mainstream. But there are a lot of songs you won't be able to guess.
Especially these days, when the tools for individually producing technical high-quality music are a lot more easily available, and publishing tools like SoundCloud are available.
But you can be a struggling indie artist who sings catchy pop - take Belle and Sebastian, which have published their music for years through a small independent label, but they make very poppy music.
There's a correlation - big mainstream labels might prefer publishing happy pop that sells a lot, and tortured, sad artists might be more common on indie labels that don't try to maximize sales and go for the long tail - but that's not the definition of indie, it's just a side effect.
Belle and Sebastian are indie because they published their music for most of their existence via small, independent record labels. That's the definition.
To quote John Carmack, "You need enough pizza and Diet Coke to stick in your refrigerator, a cheap PC to work on, and the dedication to go through with it."
Doom could be considered an indie game by today's standards
> Jeepster Records is a London, England-based independent record label, [..] specialising in British indie and alternative bands, [like] Belle and Sebastian and Snow Patrol.
@Neil I don't think so, because IIRC, it was published by a large publisher.
Ah, it wasn't - they cut ties with their publisher Apogee and self-published it.
@Developer00 afaik, storage permission is granted by default unless the user manually denies your app. as for the camera app, it's another permission I think
@Neil There was a good interview with Sid Meier I listened to a while back where he talks about the challenges of distributing software when you model was publishing tiny ads in PC enthusiast magazines and hoping someone sends you a self-addressed stamped envelope to send the floppies back in.
@misha130 Pop, like indie, is also a hard definition to pin.
With several different definitions that tend to be used in different contexts.
@Neil Nah, you had viruses that attached themselves to innocuous EXE files. They would add their binary payload into the EXE (so file size was a good indication of an infected file) and patched the executable loader to run their code and then start the app itself.
Hi guys, I have a method that updates data. Im sending the request through SOAP UI and it is updating successfully but when I change the position of one of its properties in the request and try to send it, it doesnt update that property .. Does the sequence of the property count?
I have a method that updates data. Im sending the request through SOAP UI and it is updating successfully but when I change the position of one of its properties in the request and try to send it, it doesnt update that property .. Does the sequence of the property count?
Oh good. They have a spectacuarly non-standards-compliant SOAP api where you literally have to hand craft the envelope because libraries will make it complain
I've been meaning to turn this 2001 Dell Dimension 6500 into a server of some kind; maybe that could be it :P
one of the biggest problems with using that thing as a PC is the fact that I'd need to get a different network card, since the one it has is dial-up only
also opening this thing up is the biggest pain in the ass ever @.@ literally it opens up like a book after you undo a latch on the top...back when Dell thought that foregoing screws automatically meant the case would be easier to open
Also, your a isn't a map to begin with, it's an array. Since arrays are first class objects they can have properties, but it's a bit of abuse to use them in this fashion.