@TERMINXX_PSN@esjesjesj The people are speaking about what? Whining and crying like petulant children over casting decisions in fiction. What pussies. Every one of you lmao. Fragile.
I spoke to my old friend Lindsey Graham this morning, the senior Senator from South Carolina. He’s still recovering in the hospital. We talked for just shy of 20 minutes … about IRAN, UKRAINE, the unfolding situation in MAINE, my visit to the William Henry Harrison Presidential Library, and even a little bit of Senate history. I told him we want to see him back at work as soon as possible.
@stierlara@nuhre_ I'd argue it's the opposite. Leaving these morons to their own devices has led to 15 years of lethargy and mediocre video games. Time for the seat to get hot.
REMINDER: SONY WANTED TO SHUT DOWN THE PS3 STORE WHEN THE PS5 RELEASED. THEY REVERSED COURSE DUE TO PUSHBACK.
THEY TRIED TO FORCE PC PLAYERS TO LINK PSN ACCOUNTS FOR HELDIVERS 2. THEY REVERSED COURSE DUE TO PUSHBACK
#savephysicalgames#NOTBUYINGPS6
Kai Cenat speaks on the people that say he only makes content for kids 😳
“The content that I make is for me and other grown n*ggas, if your kids tune in u gotta call their parents, that ain’t me.”
Embark Studios has shared how much data it collects while testing and improving ARC Raiders.
> Data engineer Mattias Andersson said the studio tracks every bullet fired, where every player is, and what every bullet hits.
“We track every bullet in these games. We track where the players are. We track whenever a bullet hits something.”
>At its busiest, ARC Raiders created more than 100 billion gameplay events every day, using about 30TB of data daily.
Andersson said the team can search through that data in less than two seconds.
“So as soon as you fire a bullet, two seconds later, I can run a query… and find out if you hit or not.”
> The studio also uses this data to improve matchmaking. It analyzes how people play, including who usually starts fights, to match players with similar playstyles.
“We want to know who shot first in any encounter… We try to make sure that people who want to PvP a lot get matched with people who PvP a lot, and those who never initiate fights get matched with more friendly players.”
Tim Sweeney says Steam is leaving billions on the table by ignoring major live-service games like Fortnite, Riot Games, and Genshin Impact. 🔗 https://t.co/BZ6UPyrVgD
"They're missing out on a lot of opportunity that I think they could have if they took the more forward-looking, open view that Epic has taken, and Microsoft has taken."
A new class action lawsuit accuses Samsung, Micron, and SK hynix of working together to restrict RAM supply, raise prices, and prioritize AI memory production
🚨BREAKING: In the Chicago suburbs, an ICE agent assaults a teenager for filming his vehicle, and pointing out that it illegally has no license plate.
In the video, a U.S. citizen is peacefully filming an ICE vehicle, that is sitting in a parking lot. He walks to the back of the SUV to document that it has no license plate.
That’s when the ICE agent jumps out, screaming, “Get away from my vehicle!” while aggressively charging toward the teenager.
The teenager immediately backs away, but the ICE agent keeps walking at him, tries to trip the teenager , and continues yelling… even though neither of them are anywhere near the vehicle anymore.
Filming government officials performing their duties, in public, is protected by the First Amendment. That protection doesn’t disappear just because the official doesn’t like being recorded.
An officer also can’t lawfully use physical force simply because someone is filming them. Using force, to stop someone from recording, is a violation of that person’s constitutional rights.
And let’s not ignore the reason the ICE agent got out of his car in the first place...
Illinois law requires vehicles, driven on public roads, to display valid registration plates. This ICE vehicle is not following that law.
So, if your first instinct, when someone records your conduct, is to assault them… you’re proving exactly why the public is recording in the first place.