Yeah and it'd be cool if they threw in a couple other games to show its versatility. HL3 of course, but a multiplayer game and maybe a unique puzzle game would be a good mix of game types.
Lee
I think you're mixing up ME and 2000. ME (consumer) came after 98 (consumer) and 2000 (business) was the NT (business) version. I ran 2000 for a few years. Huge step up from 98/ME in stability and less eye candy bloat than XP.
Slackware was my first and I didn't know that package managers existed (or maybe they didn't at the time) to resolve dependencies and even if they did, they probably lagged on versions. I learned true dependency hell when trying to build my own apache, sendmail, etc from source while missing a ton of dependency libraries (or I needed newer versions) and then keeping things relatively up to date. Masochistic? Definitely for me, but idk how much of that was self inflicted by not using the package tool. Amazing learning at the time. This would have been mainly Slackware 3.x and 4.x. I switched to Debian (not arch BTW).
How would it be too late? To develop a huge following? Idk, buy if you just want to stream for the hell of it, I don't see how that matters. I've not gamed much the last few years, but I started again recently, upgraded my computer, and my ISP bumped my upload speed (finally), so I can stream without it impacting my game play.
I turn it on if I remember, but since I'm streaming just because why not (maybe I'll find someone new to game with or maybe someone will be amused by my shitty skills), I don't do it regularly and have no regular followers, as such, I forget to check the chat and have often had people join and type and then leave, presumably because I ignored them (or I'm just not worth watching).
OK a lot of rambling, I guess the summary is, stream because you want to, not because you want a following/make money and then it's definitely not too late, but also don't ignore the people who join your stream.
It appears that it shall be known as the Dalacos Paradox: using something as an example of something that is best ignored or forgotten, thus increasing its attention and preventing it from being forgotten.
EDIT: I found "boomerang effect", which I think captures this in that you get the opposite of the intended behavior although this seems to be focused more on persuasion rather than bringing attention to something that you don't want to get attention.
An non political example might be "this book/movie/picture/song is so bad that no one should read/watch/see/hear it", thus brining attention to it and causing more people to read/watch/see/hear it than would have had it not been mentioned. Most of the stuff I was finding that sounded close seemed to be not quite right (related to persuasion or in the context of counter examples).
I've used WxWidgets and Win32 API in C. I suspect OP will quickly learn why electron is popular even though it's so bloated. That said, sounds like OP wants a light weight and cross platform option, so WxWidgets gets my vote. Granted it's been over 10 years since I've used it.
I agree unless the backend server is including it in the response/response headers for some reason, which wouldn't make a tool like this work in the general case. I thought maybe there was a Cloudflare API that would inadvertently leak the origin IP in an error response in some special case or something of that nature, but I'd assume they would have patched that rather quickly. I'm very curious if this tool ever worked and if so, how.
If you had a single specific host you were trying to find the origin server for, you could basically scan their ASN and well known data center, particularly the big cloud provider, IPs by sending requests to them with the desired host header to try to find an entry point (load balancer, reverse proxy, web server), but I don't think that's practical, particularly with a free API that (presumably) responded in a reasonable amount of time. The underlying API used by the linked script is no longer available, so I don't know if it worked or response times.
Furthermore, a well configured system should ignore requests not originating from Cloudflare's IPs (or use a tunnel) to prevent bypassing Cloudflare, although I've seen plenty not do this. Cloudflare even publishes the subnets you should allow. Easy to integrate that in to a cron type job, terraform, or other way to keep rules updated even though they've very rarely changed.
They're not actually bad. It's just a joke that nearly everyone plays along with kind of like Americans using imperial measurements. Americans don't actually use imperial. Sure, the products may list both measurements, but just for historical reasons. TV shows and movies use them as just another trope, which helps with keeping the illusion up. Anyway, I'm gonna go buy a pound of candy corns and eat the shit out of them.
I was curious as to how it's done unfortunately that repo won't answer. All it's doing is calling a separate http api that returns the IP. I looked quickly and didn't find a repo for that other API.
A ton of companies have ESOP, but that doesn't stop enshitification because the employees generally don't own enough shares to exert control.
I think you would make a good friend too
Basically what Nintendo did on one of their schemes to prevent unauthorized software (Famicom Disk System, which was a floppy disk drive for the Japanese version of the NES). This was the physical Nintendo logo embossed on to floppy disk and with a flat disk instead, the disk can't be physically loaded (sort of, you can add extra cut outs). Other game systems required a logo or similar other brand/trademark/IP to be present in the game code in order to boot, so if you wanted to make your own game without Nintendo's blessing, you had to invlude their IP in your physical disk or in the game code just to get it to boot. This BMW patent seems to be in the spirit of those hard and software protections that prevent people from doing what they want with the hardware (car) they bought.