font sizes and alignment are a big hint. usually you want punchy slogans to be the same or bigger than the surrounding text, and text on posters is usually centered.
font sizes and alignment are a big hint. usually you want punchy slogans to be the same or bigger than the surrounding text, and text on posters is usually centered.
can we not with the ai signs, the text is so annoying
i’d even be okay with making the graphic with an image generator if you would just fix the text
outer wilds OST
the story is much better in jc2 but it’s so hard to go back to with how well executed the movement was in 3. it’s a shame they skimped on the writing.
like, the final boss in 2 is a fist fight on a flying cluster of ICBMs. the final boss in 3 is… a helicopter.
if that was all then yes, but their suggested perks sounded like they were shutting people off from part of the preservation results.
such a strange survey. it was all about “exclusive access” and “extra perks”. i just want to support game fixes so that everyone gets access, but that wasn’t part of it.
what is the point of posts like the one in the image? it just reads like fishing for approval.
yeah, reg set <key> <value>
i think it is
that’s annoying, i certainly didn’t get a copy.
not any more.
you don’t really need to be an avid player to have an opinion on the visuals.
you are framing a fundamental issue with the system as a positive, which is confusingly common for crypto advocates.
i’m not interested in this conversation.
this reads like a mad rant.
first of all, bitcoin in its original form was meant to be used as a transaction log between banks. it was never meant to be a currency on its own, which can be seen in the fact that efforts in scaling up to more than a few million users consistently fail.
in practice, all cryptocurrencies result in a centralisation of power by default, whether they use proof of work or proof of stake, because they are built so that people with more resources outside the network can more easily get sway over the system. by either simply buying more hardware than anyone else (for pow) or pooling more of the limited resource (for pos) they can control the entire thing.
cryptocurrencies are a libertarian solution to the problem of capitalism, which is to say, a non-solution. the actual solution is to limit the use of financial incentives. i’d wager most people on lemmy would rather abolish currency altogether than go to crypto.
in the case of anubis one could argue that the goal is to save energy. if too much energy is being spent by crawlers they might be configured to auto-skip anubis-protected sites to save money.
also, i’d say the tech behind crypto is interesting but that it should never have been used in a monetary context. proof of stake doesn’t help there, since it also facilitates consolidation of capital.
okay, git using the same algorithm may have been a bad example. let’s go with video games then. the energy usage for the fraction of a second it takes for the anubis challenge-response dance to complete, even on phones, is literally nothing compared to playing minecraft for a minute.
if you’re mining, you do billions of cycles of sha256 calculations a second for hours every day. anubis does maybe 1000, once, if you’re unlucky. the method of “verification” is the wrong thing to be upset at, especially since it can be changed
the hashing part? it’s the same algo as here.
the functional difference is that this does it once. you could just as well accuse git of being a major contributor to global warming.
hash algorithms are useful. running billions of them to make monopoly money is not.
god, if “we didn’t think we’d need it” isn’t just the motto of wayland at this point.