FergleFFergleson

joined 2 years ago
[–] FergleFFergleson 3 points 1 month ago

Not a lot is standing out to me as a must-buy (in part because I already have a lot in my library). Kind of thinking about Last Train Home, 9 Kings, and Knights in Tight Spaces. A part of me has also been thinking about snagging the old Guild Wars trilogy. GW1 is ancient by gaming standards, but still has a lot to offer.

[–] FergleFFergleson 5 points 1 month ago

Looking over his IMDB credits the first thing that stands out is that he's been in a TON of stuff I've never even heard about. I obviously need to do some catch-up work. Of the stuff he's been in that I have seen:

Cowboy Bebop - I didn't really like the series as a whole, but I liked him in it.
Star Trek - I really liked his(their) take on Hikaru Sulu. The movies...eh... but his (and several other) individual performances were really solid.
H&K Go To White Castle - Incredibly stupid movie that's also really damn fun.

[–] FergleFFergleson 1 points 2 months ago

As others have said, it depends where you draw the line on what is a "gadget". But ignoring some of the obvious ones that have already been mentioned several times: I think I might have to go with my desktop audio mixing board. It lets me easily mix sound from multiple computers/devices and run them all into one set of headphones or speakers. I can adjust the volume of each input independently and without futzing with the settings in individual software applications/systems.

My other mention would go to my Raspberry Pi's. Incredibly compact, low-power-usage, but potent, versatile computers. Even just one or two can power a broad suite of at-home/self-hosted services, removing the need for costly, privacy-invasive/insecure, third-party services.

[–] FergleFFergleson 35 points 2 months ago

I'm starting to think we need to reframe this a little. Stop referring to "artists". It's not just lone, artistic types that are getting screwed here, it's literally everyone who has content that's been exposed to the Internet. Artists, programmers, scientists, lawyers, individuals, companies... everyone. Stop framing this as "AI companies versus artists" and start talking about it as "AI companies versus intellectual property right holders", because that's what this is. The AI companies are choosing to ignore IP law because it benefits them. If anyone, in any other context, tried to use this as a legal defense they would be laughed out of the courtroom.

[–] FergleFFergleson 2 points 2 months ago

I haven't worked with it myself as I'm not working on Japanese right now, but I had a recommendation recently for Satori Reader.

[–] FergleFFergleson 18 points 2 months ago

No way this kind of disconnected-from-the-users attitude will backfire. This game is sure to be a great experience! /s

[–] FergleFFergleson 30 points 3 months ago

Well, that would explain a lot.

I'm also guessing that at "up to 30%" of the company's leadership decisions are being made by AI too.

[–] FergleFFergleson 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago) (1 children)

I remember running into this as well. It's because Plex installs itself with its own user. So post-install, you need to add the Plex account to your user Group and restart the service.

sudo usermod -a -G plex
sudo service plexmediaserver restart

Two commands and bam! You're in business.

ref: https://askubuntu.com/questions/458547/i-cannot-get-plex-server-to-see-any-directories#1472193

[–] FergleFFergleson 3 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Three things based on other comments here:

(1) is free, try that!

Be wary with this. They may be free for students or small deployment situations, but may have increasingly agressive demands as your user base increases in size or your seek some kind of profitability. I wouldn't panic about, but do make sure to carefully review the licensing terms for ALL tools that you use in your process.

(2) Learning/Tutorials

Depends a bit on how you learn best. Youtube almost always has some good instructional videos. Most of the major tool/engine makers have large libraries of tutorials to draw from as well. Even very experienced programmers routinely have dozens of browser tabs that start from web searches that read "<name of my game engine/platform> how to do ".

(3) If you look to hire or contract out some of the work, just realize that you will very often only get what you really pay for. Quality work costs more. One option you have is to spend the next year or three doing everything you can yourself. Get as close to complete as you can. Then go to something like Kickstarter and look for completion funds. "Look at how complete the game is. If I can just get a little bit of money, I can hire a professional to do that one part that I couldn't do myself". This is especially usual for getting access to skills like art, music, voice acting, etc.

[–] FergleFFergleson 2 points 4 months ago

Doing my second play-through of Stalker 2. Really enjoying the game (140 total hours), but it does still have quite a few bugs. Most of the bugs are minor, but a few have been pretty serious.

[–] FergleFFergleson 46 points 4 months ago

Anyone considering attending a protest of any kind should probably at least skim over some of this guidance:

https://ssd.eff.org/module/attending-protest

[–] FergleFFergleson 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Follow the ~~money~~ hashtags! Seriously, if you can't immediately find people to follow (a very common problem when people first join a social network), follow hashtags! Super easy to do:

  • Search for your topic
  • In the search results, switch to the "Hashtags" tab (or just scroll down to the hashtag section of the results)
  • click into one of the hashtag search results
  • Review the posts, frequency, etc. If you like what you see, click "Follow Hashtag".

It really does a great job of (1) populating your feed with interesting, relevant content and (2) can ultimately connect you to new people with similar interests.

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