I’d say there’s at least a 90% chance that this was addressed in some background gag in Bojack Horseman lol
I’d say there’s at least a 90% chance that this was addressed in some background gag in Bojack Horseman lol
I imagine a lot of people have jobs where it would be trivial to set something like this up on company resources under the radar and then lose access / get laid off without the company ever knowing it’s running
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The “too good to be true” sell and complete lack of detail / pricing on their website is sketchy imo. I’m immediately suspicious of any org that profits off of piracy in such an opaque way
I’m sure they’ve been spending the last week thinking of a way to recap this without showing the full thing, such as just focusing on specific sections instead of showing a time-lapse of the the entire canvas. Similarly I’d be surprised if they released the pixel placement data set this time without major edits
Sometimes I think the developers of these kinds of projects sometimes drink too much of their own Kool aid – yes emulation as a concept is legal but 99% of dolphin users are not ripping and emulating their own legal games and they know that
Ya I’m surprised that people are advocating for Plex these days especially in a self hosting community, it’s overbloated and mostly exists to force their FAST service down your throat
Ya fuck star trek
Gotta wonder if all of these people making the exact same joke scrolled past it 20 times before posting
It’s literally the opposite of that lol, they’re making changes that they know will be tolerated by 90% of the user base
Ya it’s a little concerning how quickly people shifted to posting low effort crap in bulk in order to simulate a bigger community
Ya it’s a little concerning how quickly people shifted to posting low effort crap in bulk in order to simulate a bigger community
Threadiverse sounds like what Meta/Threads would call the fediverse lol
Team preoccupied with whether or not they can vs team thinking if they should
I’ve never used one myself but I’ve heard talk of various ones either A) taking the public (real) like number and extrapolating the dislikes based on an old like/dislike ratio available for the video from before the dislike removal (doesn’t work on new videos) or B) the extension includes a feature where the user can like/dislike the video within the extension and then the dislike number is extrapolated using the public (real) like number and the extension’s private like/dislike ratio. In either case the number is not connected to the “real” dislike count that YouTube would have access to internally
Pretty sure those extensions all use some sort of estimate methodology, the dislikes aren’t available via any apis or anything
To cut out the BS legal double speak, it’s so you can have a steam-like interface that’s designed to be natively compatible with pirated games and allow friends to access them from your server
idk about OP but I use chrome because in Firefox I have to manually download my web history and send it to Google so they can log it for my security, Chrome streamlines this process and ensures Google has my data even if I mistakenly wonder onto a website they don’t have trackers on