Related work (all involve noise and flickering images, photosensitive eyes/brains beware): - "This game disappears if you pause it": https://youtu.be/Bg3RAI8uyVw - "Illusion: If You Pause, The Image Will Disappear":…
We had Denver and Barney and The Land Before Time but kids suddenly memorizing all the latin names of each species was not a thing before Jurassic Park. (I think.)
I guessed HOPTO and PHOOT but none of them worked unfortunately
Then we'll have to decrease the radius a bit.
Whenever leap seconds were added, Google was running the clocks on their servers slower/faster over a longer period of time (hours) so they would slowly drift back in sync with the solid platinum, perfectly spherical…
Does Andy know what Jeff thinks is going to happen?
What is making it complex for authors to sell directly? Edit: hah, only 15 minutes late with my attempt at Socratic spiel: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48810056
Thanks everyone, my C++ knowledge has been greatly expanded today.
The first one too? Isn't that the map-reduce fork-join golden example of multiprocessing?
The first form is easier to send to 32 beefy cores or 1024 small CPUs or a Beowulf cluster or a GPU or people sitting in a room.
For me the smaller footprint, lower power consumption and portability (admittedly between desks only) are the three advantages of using a laptop over a desktop for these purposes.
Polarizing filter? One-way mirror?
Shadow volumes were the big feature in that one, but this is a rendering, non-gameplay advancement: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_volume
You could generate sweet stereoscopic images with two differently colored foils placed in an eyeglasses frame: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaglyph_3D
Banking also appeared on the platform in the form of EMS.
My issue with it is a missing "in mice"-style qualifier, but this time it is of the geographical nature. The study is focusing on England: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/news/latest-news/2026/medicine-and-de...
What about the Su-27 and Eurofighter games (from a bit later)?
The mission scenario descriptions were circulating both as a text file and in the hint section of a computer magazine we had, but I didn't get either for a long time. "Zulu alert" mode lets you take as many enemies off…
On its own it's a good fun fact. But just look for it in this comments section, when it becomes a reflex to mention it in relation to slop/generated content it slowly loses its color. (That's what she said)
Nobody asks _how_ are all the Bluesky instances :(
Cursor 3 as well.
Internet Search Thing now tells me sable (for soft brushes) and hog hair (for wire-like brushes) is the best hair for this purpose. Oxen occasionally show up. Yaks nowhere to be found. Coincidentally, this is also the…
Weeellll those tutorials span a ~30 year time range now :) AMPP stacks and Python's built-in HTTP server was available most of the time if you needed to get away from the file:// protocol. The protection mechanism was…
I tried this on a small example and it works indeed. In my head this would have been something like a restrictive CSP script-source directive, even if not exposed in response headers or anything.
I keep thinking about this and now your comment reminded me of it: did OpenAI have a "gym" 10(+?) years ago where autonomous cars were trying to navigate Los Santos in GTA5? If not, whose work was it and why did it come…
Related work (all involve noise and flickering images, photosensitive eyes/brains beware): - "This game disappears if you pause it": https://youtu.be/Bg3RAI8uyVw - "Illusion: If You Pause, The Image Will Disappear":…
We had Denver and Barney and The Land Before Time but kids suddenly memorizing all the latin names of each species was not a thing before Jurassic Park. (I think.)
I guessed HOPTO and PHOOT but none of them worked unfortunately
Then we'll have to decrease the radius a bit.
Whenever leap seconds were added, Google was running the clocks on their servers slower/faster over a longer period of time (hours) so they would slowly drift back in sync with the solid platinum, perfectly spherical…
Does Andy know what Jeff thinks is going to happen?
What is making it complex for authors to sell directly? Edit: hah, only 15 minutes late with my attempt at Socratic spiel: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48810056
Thanks everyone, my C++ knowledge has been greatly expanded today.
The first one too? Isn't that the map-reduce fork-join golden example of multiprocessing?
The first form is easier to send to 32 beefy cores or 1024 small CPUs or a Beowulf cluster or a GPU or people sitting in a room.
For me the smaller footprint, lower power consumption and portability (admittedly between desks only) are the three advantages of using a laptop over a desktop for these purposes.
Polarizing filter? One-way mirror?
Shadow volumes were the big feature in that one, but this is a rendering, non-gameplay advancement: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_volume
You could generate sweet stereoscopic images with two differently colored foils placed in an eyeglasses frame: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaglyph_3D
Banking also appeared on the platform in the form of EMS.
My issue with it is a missing "in mice"-style qualifier, but this time it is of the geographical nature. The study is focusing on England: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/news/latest-news/2026/medicine-and-de...
What about the Su-27 and Eurofighter games (from a bit later)?
The mission scenario descriptions were circulating both as a text file and in the hint section of a computer magazine we had, but I didn't get either for a long time. "Zulu alert" mode lets you take as many enemies off…
On its own it's a good fun fact. But just look for it in this comments section, when it becomes a reflex to mention it in relation to slop/generated content it slowly loses its color. (That's what she said)
Nobody asks _how_ are all the Bluesky instances :(
Cursor 3 as well.
Internet Search Thing now tells me sable (for soft brushes) and hog hair (for wire-like brushes) is the best hair for this purpose. Oxen occasionally show up. Yaks nowhere to be found. Coincidentally, this is also the…
Weeellll those tutorials span a ~30 year time range now :) AMPP stacks and Python's built-in HTTP server was available most of the time if you needed to get away from the file:// protocol. The protection mechanism was…
I tried this on a small example and it works indeed. In my head this would have been something like a restrictive CSP script-source directive, even if not exposed in response headers or anything.
I keep thinking about this and now your comment reminded me of it: did OpenAI have a "gym" 10(+?) years ago where autonomous cars were trying to navigate Los Santos in GTA5? If not, whose work was it and why did it come…