They don't mean anything. It's just a way to let anyone know that representatives from these areas are shit human beings.
Matriks404
That's hardly a bad thing unless you can't use the most common way (e.g. paying by credit/debit card) in shops.
They will eventually be all taken down. That's the point. They have no legal framework to exist, and Nintendo could strike any time they want, like Rockstar did with the re3 project.
They also have valid reasons to think that these projects are causing them to lose money, since they give alternative (and technically better) solutions to play their old games, without buying any Nintendo hardware or software (unless you dump your games, but let's be honest. You don't).
Exactly. But somehow I got downvoted heavily for saying the obvious.
No one says that the actual source code (C or whatever) is "piped out". The machine instructions (in form of a binary) you have before decompiling is the code that is executed by the machine/emulator is copyrighted like any other data on the disc/cartridge. You are not writing the game yourself if you are decompiling it. And it's logically a derivative work. The fact that the resulting "instructions" is not the source code that developers wrote is as expected. It won't create it from thin air.
I don't understand what kind of mental gymnastics you need to do to think that you are doing something original here.
I won't say if that project is legal or not, but expect it (and many others) to be taken down by Nintendo soon. Make a local copy if you want to preserve it.
There was only one time when Microsoft cared about having consistent UI and even did a lot of research on how to make operating system easier for people that didn't use computers before. It was when they developed Windows 95.
I see that Fedora uses Btrfs, so it should be able to take file system snapshots, which are sort of an alternative to the immutable thing, isn't it?
What does that even mean? Did they integrate Gemini to all their core products?
That said, I use Gemini occasionally, and it seems useful to me, although I still take the information it generates with caution, and I prefer to read documentation for whatever I want to do, because I don't want to blindly follow what LLM's generate (that's just asking for problems).
That's seems reasonable to me. It's 6 rolls per one person in 2 weeks. There are times where I think I'd use more, lol.