

If you never played adventure mode, I’d definitely recommend trying it! Assuming you liked df at least
If you never played adventure mode, I’d definitely recommend trying it! Assuming you liked df at least
I miss swg, it was my first mmo that I got into.
I’ve never played it and haven’t seen nuch gameplay of it. Would you recommend d picking it up even if I don’t have anyone to play multi-player with?
Huh I heard about his new game but didn’t realize it was already in some sort of early access. Cool!
Is it good? This is the first I’m seeing about the game apparently
Is it good on mobile? I’m not super interested in playing it on PC, but it looked like a good time wasting mobile game
Not sure if you’re serious or not, but pokemon cards have come with code cards for a long time. The problem is they’re for a different game and won’t work on tcg pocket lol
A subscription is required??
Do micro transactions or even battle pass type things count as subscriptions in the data he’s referring to? Or buying subscriptions/passes with in game currency that was purchased with real money?
I think it’d be more appropriate to compare the upfront cost of a game (and the revenue from it) vs additional revenue generated by people who already paid that upfront cost.
I’m alright with the games that give you daily rewards but they don’t have to be consecutive days. It still benefits people who log in everyday, but you at least aren’t entirely missing out
So many good multiplayer games weren’t live service games and did just fine
You’re probably looking for some sort of configuration management tool like chef, ansible, saltstack, or puppet. If you’re not already familiar with one, ansible is pretty easy to get started with.
If you’re also wanting something that can create the server itself, terraform is great and supports most cloud providers and supervisors.
Lol sorry, I’m probably not explaining it properly.
Corporations need a way to achieve those two points. Normally this is done by some sort of MITM corporate proxy and maybe some invasive spyware-like software on the machine itself.
Some people absolutely abuse this power and would have no problem reading your personal e-mail, or watching your desktop screen all day. I agree that this shouldn’t be a thing and they shouldn’t have access without some sort of strict approval process.
But, how is a corporation going to prove that you did or did not send a secure/private document on your work device through your personal e-mail? If you are using your personal email, it won’t go through the corporate mail server so they have to rely on either MITM proxies and logs, or something locally on the device. The alternative (no monitoring at all) would lead to situations where data is compromised and the company has no idea why or how, if they even are aware of it at all.
Similarly what if an employee uses their personal email to accidentally download a virus and that virus starts uploading all of the files on the device to a server somewhere? Without any sort of monitoring, that event could go undetected.
If there’s an alternative, I’d love to hear about it. But I’ll probably always stick to keeping work and personal data separate.
We need laws to make them not to
That would conflict with laws that protect your PII/PHI. Are you okay with a doctor saving your health information onto their personal cell phone? Or a bank teller with access to move money between accounts able to do so from their cell phone at a bar while drunk? Or a plastic surgeon posting photos of their patients to social media without their consent?
Corporations suck, but people also suck. Even if there’s no malice intended, the average person is bad at personal security and can’t really be trusted to protect data that the corporation is legally responsible for protecting.
We should not forfeit our right to privacy
My point from before was that if you want privacy, don’t use a device that you don’t own. If you’re doing something not work related, use your own device and don’t use the corporate wifi.
If you want privacy, don’t use a work device for personal stuff and don’t use a personal device for work stuff. Corporations are always going to want to monitor their own equipment for data exfil, etc, I don’t think any laws are going to tell them not to.
Any games in particular you’d recommend purchasing and not playing?
I haven’t been keeping up with games this year due to reasons, what are some of the games that might be better than TotK?
Just FYI about rocket money, I looked into using it before and found out they actually charge you for things they cancel.
I don’t remember exactly how it worked, but something like a percentage of the potential money you saved. So if you have a $100/mo subscription that they help you cancel, that is not $10 that goes to them, but someting like $120 (10% of the annual cost, not monthly).
I’m making those numbers up, but the idea was something like that. It felt pretty scummy when I read about it because they don’t make it super obvious how they’re making money.