I'm live on Twitch!
Today I'll be playing the highly anticipated Mina the Hollower, from the creators of Shovel Knight! This one is really promising, do you wanna come take a quick look before trying it yourself? c:
https://t.co/ojsyvuicRu
@ShipbreakerGame My favourite moment gotta be when I first accidentally cut into a section that was still pressured, and the hilarity of pain, flying ship pieces, and increased debt that ensued.
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In case you're wondering why I haven't published my latest video... you can thank @DistroKid for STILL not white-listing my channel from MY OWN MUSIC despite asking them to fix it for MONTHS. After 6 months of work, I'm sorry, but I need the ad revenue to make a living.
It's 2026 and your CEO just sent you a 2,400 line pull request.
You get a cup of coffee and sit down to review it.
It's a disaster. A dozen unrelated refactors. Unused methods with names like `convertFromBase10` and `normalizeBeforeSerialization`.
You catch a few hardcoded API keys, but that's ok. It's part of the dance. They didn't consider that someone might look at this diff. Here's a comment buddy.
They respond in an hour (after Copilot, qodo, CodeRabbit and Greptile finish their reviews) saying we shouldn't worry about "implementation details" anymore, those are relics of the past. Hey let's jump into a room and figure it out. We can't just agree to disagree, this is probably my last job in tech and I can't watch this fucker burn the place to the ground.
The PR merges and goes to prod. You feel a shared sense of apathy and dread with Hannah the intern (she has to review his AI generated social media posts ever since Grok got too imaginative).
That night you go to sleep and have nightmares of that code. You can still see the shapes of it on the backs of your eyelids.
You go to work the next day ready to quit. You no longer understand the system. There is no foundation. Time to use those savings and an SBA loan to buy a liquor store and never login to GitHub again.
@idahocountrydoc@pterodaustro This clarification by the OP made me change my mind to blue: If people who can't decide for themselves will press their button at random, I'd rather try to press blue.
@cinnamontoastk It's the exact same scenario, just different phrasing. The original makes me think that it's a choice between being selfish or choosing for the greater good. The other phrasing sounds makes me think "If more than half of all people choose to die, they don't get their wish".
@baalzamon35 I like the rephrased version of the task: "If you press the red button you live. If you press the blue button you die, unless at least 50% of all other people also press the button that makes them die"
@kskrygan@trisha_gee Yes please! I don't care if it's not the newest, fastest thing, I just want something to occasionally do a quick review of my changes before I bother a colleague to take a deeper look as a second step. And I'd very much prefer to not need to be connected to a data center for that
It's interesting seeing the industry double down on proving just how badly end of life plans are needed for games. This is exactly the sort of thing #StopKillingGames wants regulators / MEPs to see. Customers increasingly have no protections when it comes to video games.
People really saying “just connect to the internet not a big deal” my brother in Christ that’s not the point. God forbid a natural disaster happens or you can’t pay your WiFi bill one month and just can’t play games you PAID for until you reconnect.
It doesn’t matter if you have internet, it’s a matter of principle. You shouldn’t be okay with PS arbitrarily taking away access to games you spent your hard earned money on. The more comfortable you get with this the worse it will get.
We’re frogs in the pot and they’re slowly raising the heat and some of yall aren’t noticing.
Mr. Titus Tech is correct. cpuid-dot-com is indeed delivering malware right now.
As I began poking this with I stick I discovered this is not your typical run-of-the-mill malware. This malware is deeply trojanized, distributes from a compromised domain (cpuid-dot-com), performs file masquerading, is multi-staged, operates (almost) entirely in-memory, and uses some interesting methods to evade EDRs and/or AVs such as proxying NTDLL functionality from a .NET assembly.
The C2 domain present in one of the binaries is a clear IoC. This is the same Threat Group who was masquerading FileZilla in early March, 2026. They've been busy.