squaresinger

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squaresinger,

Dafür würd ich den Admin (Wintermute) normal direkt anschreiben.

squaresinger,

… and that’s why ÖVP members should be forced to relocate to Russia.

squaresinger,

Python sure has changed since I last used it.

squaresinger,

If you have the time to do that, it would probably work at first until the staff recognizes you and either doesn’t let you repeat that move or even outright bans you from purchasing there.

No further trouble expected, but don’t expect this to work for long for you.

squaresinger,

If the amount of money you save that way is larger than what you’d earn in the time it takes you to create new accounts and the time you spend for refueling at 3-4 gas stations than it would if you’d only hit one, then go for it.

And don’t forget the fuel it takes you to get to the next station.

For me it wouldn’t be worth it, but if you have more time than money, go for it.

squaresinger,

Hab gedacht, alle Feuern gerade und wir ITler müssen uns bei den Gehaltsverhandlungen zurückhalten um überhaupt unsre Jobs zu behalten.

Scheinbar doch nicht.

squaresinger,

Aus meiner Erfahrung scheitern Quereinsteiger oft daran, dass sie nichts zum Vorzeigen haben. Das müssen aber nicht Abschlüsse sein.

Wenn du ein cooles Projekt bastelst und auf Github stellst, oder bei irgendeinem Projekt auf Github mitarbeitest, erhöht das deine Chancen enorm. Muss nix Großes oder Geniales sein. Es muss nur irgendwas sein, das zeigt, du siehst ein Problem und kannst dir eine Lösung dafür basteln.

Quelle: Ich war oft genug auf der anderen Seite des Bewerbungsprozesses (als technischer Beisitzer) und weiß deswegen, was die Firmen sich wünschen.

squaresinger,

Es braucht viel mehr Armin Wolfs im gesamten deutschsprachigen Raum. Und vielleicht auch weltweit.

what is a skill you wish you had, and why?

Ok, I might as well go first: I wish I could draw. Not at the level where I could make photorealistic portraits, but I’ve always been envious of those who are able to scetch something together in a few minutes that perfectly captures what they want to convey. Sometimes words aren’t enough to express what I want to say, and...

squaresinger,

Robber: “Why does it take so long to stuff money in the bag?” Bank employee: “Oh, that’s what I was supposed to do.”

squaresinger,

That’s the problem with native lingua franca speakers. They don’t have a foreign language that they really have to learn.

If you don’t speak English people are mostly limited to their own country. German is worthless in France. So we all need to learn English, while you don’t have a lot of benefit of actually learning other languages.

To show my point: My team at work is spread over most of Europe. We don’t have an English native speaker in the team and there are maybe a small handful of them in the whole company. Still, we all speak English at work, because it’s the only language everyone knows.

squaresinger,

To be fair, you don’t look at the whole picture.

Yes, generating a Linux build wouldn’t require a lot of changes to the code.

But if they support Linux, they have to support Linux. This is not some student’s first indie game, but instead a massive game with up to 290 million monthly active users. That’s 3.7% of the whole world’s population! (And it’s also more than the number of total Linux users.)

So supporting Linux means they need to test on at least all currently maintained versions of maybe the top 20 or so distros on all sorts of hardware configurations. That would increase their testing costs by around a factor of 20.

They also need to support customers if they have problems. Considering the variability of Linux configurations, chances are high that this comparatively small segment of players will consume an aproportional amount of difficult support requests.

And lastly, if the Linux version of the game has some serious bugs on some setup, it might likely be that all these Linux users think the game is shit and start talking badly about it.

So it’s just a simple cost calculation: Does Linux support increase or decrease the total profit?

And if the variables change, the calculation changes with it. Exactly as Sweeny said in his post. People like Sweeny don’t care about ideals or about which OS they prefer. They only care about money.

And the revelation that a CEO likes money and dislikes risk isn’t exactly hard to figure out.

squaresinger, (edited )

I think, people here look at it from the wrong side.

The code changes required for Linux support aren’t the issue.

But if they support Linux, they have to support Linux. This is not some student’s first indie game, but instead a massive game with up to 290 million monthly active users. That’s 3.7% of the whole world’s population! (And it’s also more than the number of total Linux users.)

So supporting Linux means they need to test on at least all currently maintained versions of maybe the top 20 or so distros on all sorts of hardware configurations. That would increase their testing costs by around a factor of 20.

They also need to support customers if they have problems. Considering the variability of Linux configurations, chances are high that this comparatively small segment of players will consume an aproportional amount of difficult support requests.

And lastly, if the Linux version of the game has some serious bugs on some setup, it might likely be that all these Linux users think the game is shit and start talking badly about it.

So it’s just a simple cost calculation: Does Linux support increase or decrease the total profit?

And if the variables change, the calculation changes with it. Exactly as Sweeny said in his post. People like Sweeny don’t care about ideals or about which OS they prefer. They only care about money.

And the revelation that a CEO likes money and dislikes risk isn’t exactly hard to figure out.

I’m not saying that it’s good, but top capitalists tend to be capitalists.

And in the end, I’m pretty sure someone who has all the business figures and frequently has to defend those in front of the shareholders probably knows much better what makes business sense than any of us. Someone like him goes where the money flows.

squaresinger,

Proton with what? Stable or experimental? DXVK or Wine3D? X11 or Wayland? Nvidia closed source or open source?

That’s just what I came up with. There are probably a few more of these questions. Even Proton alone is not an easy target.

Especially if you want some low-level anticheat. And you know, if they have one platform that is easier to cheat, cheaters will all use that platform.

I don’t know about you, but playing with tons of cheaters doesn’t seem like a lot of fun to me.

squaresinger,

Seems like you didn’t read my first comment that you replied to before.

But still, your view is totally fine for a little indie studio, but that doesn’t work for a game with >200 mio players.

squaresinger,

Yeah, pretty much all answers are “You are wrong, the code change is easy”.

Kinda sad that people don’t make it even to the first line.

squaresinger,

Apparently, their cost calculation is different. Also, Fortnite has about 50x active users compared to Apex Legends. That also changes a lot.

Sweeny said it doesn’t make business sense for them and if it will make sense in the future, they will support Linux.

I’m pretty sure that someone who does know their business figures and frequently has to justify them to shareholders has a better overview about what makes business sense for them than anyone of us.

squaresinger,

Lone indie devs don’t have to care about giving support to players, testing or cheaters.

So sure, if you completely ignore the difficult/expensive parts, the rest is super easy.

squaresinger,

Did you read the second line of my post?

The code changes aren’t the issue.

squaresinger,

Companies just because they have money doesn’t mean they know what they are doing. And sometimes even less than random people.

Well, if half a million people are guessing on a choice of two options, some are going to get it right. But that’s not due to the insight of the people, but due to numbers.

Every time someone makes the business argument all I can think of Microsoft flopping with Windows Phone despite all their money. Google failing with Stadia and losing opportunity they had with hangouts to imessage. LG bowing out of smartphones. Blackberry and Nokia too late to enter smartphones despite prior dominance. Epic was so late into trying their hand at digital distribution until 2018 when doing it earlier over the past decade would have made entry easier.

These examples really don’t apply here.

  • Windows Phone, Blackberry and Nokia were caught up in a massive market change where they where too little and too late.
  • Stadia was a purpously risky gamble to be first at a potential “next big thing” and was scrapped when the global economy crumbled and cloud gaming showed no signs of wide spread adoption. If anything, this is the opposite situation than Epic and Linux.
  • Hangouts was renamed and merged with other Google chat apps, but in the end they now have messages, which is the messenger with the highest install count worldwide.
  • EGS is still a comparably new thing, considering that Steam is in the market since ~20 years while the EGS is here only ~5 years. They are growing steadily, so this is not an example that we can look at in retrospect, because it’s still unfolding. Also, sure it would have been great if they would have had to run a game distribution platform in 2003, but their money shower didn’t start until Fortnite exploded in 2017. And they pretty much immediately got into the business when they had the money to.

Also, there are some other factors in play that you didn’t consider.

Smartphones exploded between 2007 and 2010. It went from nothing to almost everything in just a few years, and those who got lucky and where ready at the right time managed to take the new market. Windows Mobile proves that it’s not enough to be super early. You need the right timing in both directions.

There is no indication that Linux will have >50% market share among gamers within the next 3 years. Yes, it nudged Linux over the 3% mark but at that rate it’s going to take a long while. Also, contrary to smartphones vs feature phones, the steam deck is an additional gaming PC for on the go. It doesn’t replace desktop gaming.

Also, when it comes to mobile gaming, the Steam Deck is a distant fourth between Android, iOS and the Switch.

And even if you limit the scope to x86 mobile gaming, they are by far not the only competitor. There are lots of others, many of them using Windows, who do the same.

And the biggest edge the Steam Deck is it’s value, because Steam subsidizes the Deck with their Store sales. Most people don’t care whether it runs Linux or not.

squaresinger,

There’s a difference though.

If the game doesn’t work for (some or all) Linux users, that’s not a big problem from Epic’s POV. They’ll lose a couple users that wouldn’t have been able to play the game without Linux support anyway.

But if the Anticheat faills on Linux, that is a completely different story. Then cheaters would all dual boot over to Linux to cheat all they want. That’s now a problem for the whole game’s user base and consequently for the publisher as well.

Something as low-level as an Anticheat would have to be rewritten almost from scratch to work on Linux and this one really needs to be tested with every possible permutation of installed relevant software. Because if one combination is found where it doesn’t work, you can be sure that the day after every cheater will be running this config.

(Just to check, do you have a background in game development and/or low-level Windows/Linux programming? I got all of that and I can tell you, nothing that looks easy from the outside is actually easy. I think you are vastly underestimating how much work goes into something until it “just works as expected”)

squaresinger,

It sucks a lot when people are so deep in their petty trench fights over brands that they think there is only “Me for this, You for that, You simp”.

I don’t care about Epic and neither do I care for Steam. I buy my games where I get them the cheapest: Key resellers. And I don’t care on which online store the cheapest price lands.

If I was still developing games, I’d deploy them on both or on the one who pays me the most for an exclusivity deal.

With that out of the way: I am only explaining simple backgrounds to people interested to listen.

But sadly so many people fight over an online shop as if it was politics.

Do you fight like that for your favourite online retailer? Or your favourite supermarket chain?

What Steam and Epic do is business. They are no charities. They do stuff that makes them money. So any sane user should see it as a business transaction and buy where the price is best for what you get.

squaresinger,

In this case, you should get a 3D printer.

squaresinger,

People like that usually have no clue about their own religion and far less about other religions.

A while ago there was a post about Netanjahus controversial speech where he referenced the story of Amaleki. And the poster seriously said that Netanjahu shouldn’t be allowed to quote the christian bible…

In general, people who completely disregard the second highest commandment given by Christ himself (love your neighbor as yourself) are not christians and shouldn’t be allowed to claim they are.

squaresinger,

You have to consider the square cube law.

Weight scales far quicker than bone strength.

And also kids are 24/7 running around and doing something for their fitness if they are allowed to.

Most adults don’t do that.

squaresinger,

In our world we do have the magic to push a wheelchair around, and it’s not even hard to do this. Tinkerers can cast the spell of self-propelling wheelchair in their garages.

But magicing someone’s legs to work is still a far way off.

(Remember, when magic is well explained and documented, and people get used to it, they tend to call it technology.)

squaresinger,

In most magic systems (RPG and books/films) using magic costs the magic user something (decades of studying, exhaustion, life force, mana potions/crystals, …). So it would be natural that they want to be compensated for their work.

So depending on how difficult regrowing an eye is for the magic user that could be quite pricey.

Some magic systems also require the magic user to exactly picture what they want to cast. Not sure if anyone can actually picture all the connections of an optical nerve.

squaresinger,

Another thing to consider here: the player characters are absolute heroes in most campaigns, not just the average rando peasant. So the stuff they have access to (magic skills, potions, money, …) is not at all an indication of what the average person has access to. Maybe that bias causes some players to lose touch with ingame reality.

squaresinger,

It’s expensive for sure, but that’s mostly because powered chairs are made by medical companies and in comparatively low numbers.

A mobility scooter has almost all components a powered chair has, and these can be had for as little as €1000.

The technology behind a powered chair isn’t hard.

And even if we use the high price of a power scooter: How much does it cost to make a paraplegic person walk?

squaresinger,

That does make sense. But still, making a powered chair is not at all technologically difficult. You need the chair, two motors and an input system that works for the user.

Sure, if there’s a lot of bespoke parts and manual labour, coupled with basically no economy of scale, it’s going to be expensive. But it’s not difficult.

squaresinger,

Mini6: You rolled 18d6. Your result looks kinda high. You punch through the darkness and hit the wall you couldn’t see behind it.

Dread: You toppled the Jenga tower. You are dead now.

squaresinger,

“I thought I was your old friend!”

squaresinger,

Actual lines of meaningful code: 3

squaresinger,

Depends on the size and your patience. A single room apartment can be had for <€400 if you get lucky.

And if you have enough patience to get into the government housing program, you pay next to nothing. Buildings older than 1955 are also regulated and quite cheap.

You can also get cooperative housing flats (and even houses) with quite a low rent. We pay <€800 for about 80m².

But we did have some 10% increase over the last year.

And for all of these cheap options you need a lot of patience (between half a year and 5 years). If you need a flat right now, you can easily pay double of that on the free market.

(All these numbers are for the capital city Vienna. Prices in other places can be much lower. There are dieing villages in many rural areas, where houses are pretty affordable, because nobody wants them.)

squaresinger,

The median income before tax is €55 731 per year and after tax and mandatory health insurance €38 623 per year. That’s per full-time worker, not per household.

Wikipedia tells me the per-person median income in the USA is $56 287.

squaresinger,

We are sadly ahead of Germany by 10-15 years. Our right wing equivalent (FPÖ) has been around since the country was re-founded after WW2.

They had their ultra-radical time about 25-30 years ago. Since then they have been in government (I think) three times as a minor partner. Every time there was some big corruption/financial scandal that kicked them back out of government and reduced their election result massively. But time and time again, people keep forgetting and they rise again. Currently they lead again in the polls.

Luckily, due to their incompetence, they never managed to do much harm, and due to the fact that they actually want to get into government, they are not as crazy radical as the AFD.

So, it’s not good, but it’s not as bad as Germany, Hungary or Italy.

There’s no talk about exiting the EU since Brexit, they don’t have the power to get rid of asylum (though they diverted funds from asylum-related issues), and by now they actually argue for “qualified, legal migrants”.

Other than that, the conservatives have been in government for ~20 years or so, with changing partners. That’s not exactly good, since they do have had a few scandals where they pushed a fair bit of money to the super rich in the country.

The social democrats elected a marxist as a leader, and since then they managed to overtake the conservatives in the polls.

The neoliberals get ~9% in the polls and they effectively never managed to do anything with that.

The greens are jumping rather wildly in the polls, and even though they only get 8-15% they currently hold the President and are in government.

squaresinger,

99pi. I started from the beginning two years ago, and now I am just 40 or so episodes behind.

squaresinger, (edited )

I do see what you mean, but I wouldn’t give people an incentive to murder artists ;)

Just imagine Disney hitmen who are killing the copyright owners for prospective Disney movies.

For heritage in general, I do agree with you.

squaresinger,

I thought the last one was going to be “…so I can talk with my boss.”

squaresinger,

I tried something very similar, but if I set my Nvidia Prime profile to on-demand (use the Nvidia GPU for games, use the Intel GPU for everything else), whenever I start a game where Proton uses DXVK, after a few minutes of playing the whole system freezes. Can’t even get to the console anymore and even shortly pressing the power button does nothing. I have to reset the whole laptop.

If I set it to use the Nvidia GPU always it works, but then battery life is nothing.

I spent ~10h so far trying to debug that issue, but it seems to be a bug that was reported in 2017 that floods the syslog with assembler stack traces so hard that the whole system has no resources left to do anything else than logging. All the bug log entries I found said there is no workaround.

So it can go either way, especially if your device uses Nvidia.

squaresinger,

Yeah, heared that a lot.

But I didn’t specifically buy my laptop for Linux, 5 years ago. And the purpose that would really urge me over to Linux is that this laptop has a 7th gen Intel CPU which just about doesn’t qualify for Win11.

So buying a new device to use Linux kinda defeats the point.

But yes, I’ll buy AMD next time.

squaresinger,

Thanks, that’s a really cool hint!

I’ll try whether that works in the locked-up state

squaresinger,

Why would you want your car to stand out?

squaresinger,

That’s the reason why average wealth doesn’t reflect the general living experience of the public.

Without London the UK would be ranking much lower on the average wealth scale.

squaresinger,

I can second Xfce. I’m using it on the chroot Linux I run on my phone. It doesn’t get much lower end than that, and Xfce performs perfectly.

And it feels much more polished than LXDE.

squaresinger,

The word “dwarf” derives from the Old German word “dwurf” which has evolved in German to “Wurf” and is equivalent to the English word “throw”.

squaresinger,

If you design your testing set well enough and then don’t care about the accuracy of the output, then it’s not hard to get that kind of accuracy even without a brain scanner.

squaresinger,

GUI and CLI are tools, both with separate advantages and disadvantages.

CLI let’s you chain different commands easily to create functionality that originally wasn’t there. It’s really flexible, but it’s also very non-obvious. Even after more than a decade of Linux usage, I still find new commands I have never heard of that do exactly what I wanted to do for a while.

GUI is great for visual stuff (nobody in their right mind would do video/audio/image editing on CLI). It’s also very obvious/explorable, so you tend to find functionality much quicker. That makes it great for any tools that you don’t use on a daily basis. And GUIs can utilise the bandwidth of human visual input much better, which makes them better whenever large amounts of data are presented.

Neither CLI nor GUI are better, they just have different use cases where they are better.

And it annoys me a lot that people don’t get that.

When you say “X is better than Y”, you always need to state for what it is better.

squaresinger,

I’m agreeing and expouning.

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