drewdevorcula

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Not only are the problems with cancelled tours bad for the artists and their crews, it's also bad for local crews who depend on the revenue from working those shows. I've worked in the live music industry for a couple decades, and shows that go under with little notice cause a huge problem in the paycheck area.

It generally does not pay very well to be an audio engineer, or a lighting engineer, or a stagehand. When you all of a sudden lose a source of revenue you were counting on, it hurts.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The first NES Castlevania. Still a classic.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago

130 for 500gb fiber is an awesome deal in the US.

I used to pay $120/mo for business class 50mb asymmetrical coaxial with like 10 up. Had to get business class when Comcast started introducing data caps on the residential tier.

Now my ISP is bundled with my rent, so what I'm actually paying is totally opaque. No idea how much of my rent goes to Comcast. Oh, and it's not optional. I can't even get other service here because Comcast has a partnership with the building owners.

Telcos are fucked here.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (2 children)

The Wizard's Chest

It's a local Denver store, but they ship. Not sure if they do international.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago

So... this is only partially correct IMHO.

Yes, it will continue to be expensive for the studios that push the envelope. However, as those studios continue to invest large amounts of cash, the smaller studios are continually getting access to better and better tools because of it. That means that a small studio can create something that is not quite-as-good as the major studios, but still very competitive, and for significantly cheaper.

As technology progresses, last-year's tech will always fall in price.

As to the point of enjoying Super Nintendo and DOS games, sure. Much of that style has returned in the form of pixel art games and what have you. But the conservative viewpoint of '8-bit was good enough in my day, why improve on it' is just short-sighted in my opinion. Why keep pumping out Atari-grade stuff when so much more is possible? Why not advance and improve?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

FWIW, the boosts are typically in their own section that you can skip if you like. I put chapter markers in every episode to make it easy for you.

Those boosts are helping to keep the network solvent by diversifying income. As advertisers are getting more skittish, income needs to come from somewhere. None of us can afford to work for free, and there's already one show that would be completely dead without boosts.

They also function similarly to feedback. Yes, there's plenty of shenanigans, but Linux Unplugged has always been about creating an entertaining talk show kind of vibe. Linux Action News is more the serious one. Unfortunately, that's on hiatus because of lack of sponsors.

Chris does try to tailor the boost segments per-show so they fit with the theme. Self Hosted, for example, keeps boosts more topical on average. It's also worth mentioning that we haven't removed email feedback - this isn't pay-to-play.

Source: I edit Linux Unplugged, Self Hosted, Office Hours, and Coder Radio.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Eternal Darkness

Silent Hill

Resident Evil 1+2

Call of Cthulhu

Quake 1-3

Doom 1+2

Chrono Trigger

Final Fantasy 3, 7, Tactics

Metal Gear Solid (all of them)

Shadowrun (SNES)

Castlevania 1-3, SOTN

I could go on...