Which should be your original comment instead of the trademark thing.
Which should be your original comment instead of the trademark thing.
I assume the people are passionate about grammar, and their corrections have nothing to do with respecting trademarks.
Since the 2014 release date.
I looked at the latest and most “recent” heroes games… they’re all rated/reviewed SO harshly.
Many of the negative reviews are (and rightly so) because of Ubisoft forcing you to use their crappy launcher, adding DRM, and otherwise making the customer experience horrible, and not because there is anything wrong with the genre.
Since it’s end to end encrypted, Ente just sees some raw bytes, it has no way to tell if what you uploaded is an image or not. So in practice it supports whatever the client can display, so your browser for the web version.
Not vodka, but you get lots of ads for 0% beer. Which ends up advertising beer while going around the rules.
SteamVR is unstable on Linux even before you get to trying to launch a game. It’s glitchy and frame rates are worse than on Windows even when you get it working, even for Linux native games.
And I’m using the Valve Index which is the best case scenario headset anyway.
Needed for VR games unfortunately
Neither do I, which is why I would love evidence to confirm my suspicions, so I can show it to others.
But I also try not to make claims that are merely suspicious, however likely.
I agree, but the argument here is “why won’t they let you upload more data if they make money off of it”. My point is that it doesn’t apply here, because uploaded files is not the data that can make them money.
Any proof, or just tinfoil?
I already use a different app for voice chat, and never used Discord’s voice chat feature.
Discord is a modern alternative to IRC, Slack, or a more fully featured version of Matrix. I never considered it for the voice chat feature.
People always bring up voice chat alternatives, which don’t replace Discord at all, because voice chat is a tiny unimportant feature of Discord that I wouldn’t notice if they removed.
Source that they make money off of uploaded files?
For example I might store blobs of data processed by my database in files that have the Base64 ID of the blob as the filename. If the filesystem was case insensitive, I’d be getting collisions.
Users probably don’t make such files, no. But 99% of files on a computer weren’t created by the user, but are part of some software, where it may matter.
And often software originally written for Linux or macOS and then ported to Windows ends up having problems due to this.
Real or not that is definitely not a run of the mill plain plane accident.
To be fair they didn’t say Tesla had any interest in “saving the world”. Just that it sells a product that can help you do it.
It’s not like getting Ublock Origin from the official website instead of the Chrome Web Store is some kind of a problem.
Ok, well “broken” sounded like, you know, that things don’t work.
They didn’t:
They stopped using the codenames in marketing, but they are still there.
Great, doesn’t change the fact nobody is passionate about protecting trademarks as you are saying.