The joke is so obvious there’s no need to comment on it so others, including myself, are using this as an opportunity to post our opinions on the difference between sci-fi and fantasy.
The joke is so obvious there’s no need to comment on it so others, including myself, are using this as an opportunity to post our opinions on the difference between sci-fi and fantasy.
I would argue that science fiction and fantasy are the same thing and the only difference is the explanation for how all the cool stuff works.
Functionally, there’s no real difference between a portal that takes the characters to another world using a wormhole and one that does it through through magic. Just like how there’s no difference between Vulcans/Klingons/Wookies and Elves/Dwarves/Beastmen. Both are intelligent non-humans.
That’s what I’m hoping for as well. The Switch is a great console and the only thing it really needs is upgraded hardware.
I thought it said “his shole had teeth” and it took me awhile to both notice the B and to really be it was for censorship.
Kind of reminds me of the left pad incident only much worse.
https://medium.com/nerd-for-tech/that-time-a-guy-broke-the-internet-23c00903ad6f
As a programmer, I consider The User to be the enemy. No matter how thoroughly I seemingly test my code, the second the user gets their hands on it, it breaks left and right from all the crazy shit they do.
Exactly. I cut and paste all the time but I make sure I know what the code is doing first before I actually add the code.
I’m really bad with this in games. I even hoarded iron back when I still played Minecraft simply because it was a resource I couldn’t infinitely produce.
Cobblestone generator = use only cobblestone tools
What I find surprising is that this is done by hand. I would have assumed it would be some assembly line process.
I had to read both of your comments and then really work my brain to figure it out.
There’s also a lot of “what idiot wrote this code” only to check git and find out it was you.
I agree with this 100%. It would also help with QOL since I won’t need to follow a bunch of the same communities spread out over numerous instances.
When I first played Morrowind, I was quite surprised when people took offense to me robbing them of all they owned. Now when I play games I’m never sure if theft is a crime or not.
I tried this out on my mastodon account and it worked really well. Honestly, if browsing communities on Mastodon wasn’t such a nightmare I wouldn’t even need the Lemmy account.
I actually like the idea of just shouting my thoughts into the void. It’s probably why I feel it’s easier to post on Mastodon then on Lemmy.
I was a little upset when I noticed some people started following me.
As a backend developer who occasionally has to work on the frontend, that top image is pretty accurate although it requires bootstrap smeared all over to pretty things up a bit. After that it will have the “Good Enough” seal of approval.
This was way easier than I thought it’d be. I really like the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. It’s Rotten Tomatoes score is 44%.
I’m curious about this too. I thought that’s what Goodreads was for, tracking your books.
That’s how I always felt about it. As long as I get paid, I don’t care what they do with the software.