[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 34 points 2 months ago

The compression artifacts always led me to believe it was computer generated.

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A bevy of updates to the Saturn core of the MiSTer FPGA have targeted problems with specific games' graphics. One prominent one that was fixed recently was Cotton 2, whose VDP2-drawn backgrounds were reported in January as having problems. "I've seen that srg320 is workin

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submitted 2 months ago by MoogleMaestro@kbin.social to c/anime@lemmy.ml

Studio behind Lu over the wall, Inu-Oh, Scott Pilgrim anime, Tatami Time Machine Blues

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[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 22 points 7 months ago

I mean, I sort of get why the developers say it's Discord's policy even if it's a bit misleading.

Game developers don't really want to moderate their own discord server and simply want to use the strictest automated filtering system available and this just happens to include phone number linking. The operators of the servers themselves do not have access to these phone numbers and they are only stored by discord directly to prevent spam.

I would personally prefer games to not have their communities tied to discord, akin to how forums were big deal for games back in the day, but even then they do need some kind of automated way to filter out all the crap. This is a problem with moderating any community, including a lemmy/kbin/mastodon, and I don't blame them for simply picking the strictest option to ease the burden on the 1 or 2 people who are charged with managing these servers (especially if they are unpaid or volunteers, which is a whole other can of worms that shouldn't happen...)

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Think of this as a quick addendum to the last video. I wanted to show the RetroTINK 4K's ability to scale and rotate vertical arcade games so they can be pl...

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Episode 392 - Analogue sent me their Duo for review... along with a bunch of other people who will have their videos out at the same time (sorry!). Anyway as...

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 120 points 8 months ago

This is why some of us have been ringing the alarm on these companies stealing data from users without consent. They know the data is valuable yet refuse to pay for the rights to use said data.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 22 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

To be honest, it would be a bigger surprise if a Trump lawyer somehow wasn't a real piece of shit.

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The RetroTINK 4K ushers in yet another scaling revolution for those who crave the jump to 4K. In this episode, Coury gives an overview of the RetroTINK 4K an...

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FEATURES Simulating real hardware using FPGA Supports hardware cartridge Features USB-C compatibility for easy firmware updates Higher sound quality speakers INCLUDED 1 x FPGBC PCB 1 x Panel(Including adapter ribbon) 1 x 2w speaker 1 x 1800mAH battery TYPEC housing (Need to purchase separately) NOTES The kit only supports dedicated housing Some burning carts do not support Unable to use AA battery power supply ,Only supports lithium battery Clock adjustment due to panel limitations Maximum 1.25 speed

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 60 points 9 months ago

Security Experts probably don't log into smart tvs all that often. Just a guess.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 65 points 9 months ago

signing into cloud services and downloading apps is just so much easier to do!

This is actually true, but it doesn't speak to why self hosting is "impossible" and more to how the lack of education around computers have reached an inflection point.

There's no reason why self hosting should be some bizarre concept; In another reality, we would all have local servers and firewalls that then push our content into the wider internet and perhaps even intranet based notes. Society as a whole would be better if we chose to structure the internet that way instead of handing the keys to the biggest companies on the stock market.

I'll give this podcast a listen to though, as it might be interesting. I think the reality is that some more docker frontends might help casual users jump into the realm of self hosting -- especially be setting up proxy managers and homepage sites (like homarr) that work intuitively that never requires you to enter ports and IPs (though fearing that is also an education problem, not a problem with the concept itself.)

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 23 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

Crazy to me that they'd shut down instead of going open source and integrating with the fediverse. Doesn't even seem like a good business move as offering hosting for other companies and professional groups seems like a good market opportunity in a world where businesses even dislike Twitter.

Edit: for example, offer gitlab like service but for social media.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 38 points 9 months ago

If an intern gives you some song lyrics on demand, do they sue the parents?

Uh--- what? That analogy makes no sense. AI is trained off actual lyrics, which is why companies who create these models are at risk (they don't own the data they're feeding into the model.)

Also your comment is completely mixing Trademark and Copyright examples. It has nothing to do with brand names and everything to do with intellectual property.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 44 points 10 months ago

I imagine they'll eventually find a way to prevent us from blocking ads. Twitch TV for example has found some ways to make adblock useless.

It's a shame, and it's really just a side effect of google racing to the bottom of the adspace game. If ads weren't as cheap as they are today, they wouldn't be trying to maximize the amount of users who are forced to see advertisements.

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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by MoogleMaestro@kbin.social to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

So, while this is not exactly a typical "self-hosting" question as many users might not be using domains, I would be curious if anyone else has any experience with this.

I have NGinx Proxy Manager installed on a vps and a few docker instances that host various services (wordpress, a gitlab, etc etc) that I have bound to specific ports (wordpress to port 80, gitlab to port 3000, to give made up arbitrary examples.)

I also have a domain and a few subdomains registered as Type A resource records that look like:
[www.]somedomain[.com]
[gitlab.]somedomain[.com]

The essence of the question: When I go to NGinx Proxy Manager and register a "Proxy Host" for the gitlab subdomain, like:

Domain: gitlab.somedomain.com
Scheme: http
Forward Hostname: <IP ADDRESS HERE>
Forward Port: 3000 (AKA the port gitlab is hosted on)

This works, but it comes with the drawback that the port number is then exposed in the url bar like so:

gitlab.somedomain.com:3000

So is there some way to fix this on the NGINX proxy manager side of things? Or is this a case where I'm doing this completely wrong and someone with web-dev experience can help me see the light. While it's not a huge hindrance to my use-case, it would still be nice to understand how this is supposed to work so that I can host more services myself that require domain names without having to shell out for isolated IPs. So if I hosted a lemmy or kbin, for example, I could actually configure it to use my subdomains correctly.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 64 points 11 months ago

There's some irony to every tech company modeling their pipeline off Toyota's Kanban system...

Only for Toyota to completely fuck up their tech by running out of disk space for their system to exist on. Looks like someone should have put "Buy more hard drives" to the board.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by MoogleMaestro@kbin.social to c/gaming@kbin.social

I was having a discussion about this with a friend recently.

Back in the days of yore, fighting games would have brand new "versions" that would be repackaged with flashy names and multiple characters. These games often had yearly release cycles, or sometimes even biyearly cycles (MvC3, in particular) and there were obvious problems with this. People felt like they were "left behind" on older versions if they didn't choose to upgrade and it would make purchasing options for any outsider very confusing (especially if the games had confusing sub-titles, looking at BlazBlue!) The cherry on top: People outside of the fighting game sphere would perceive these new games as a "rip off" even if the value of the package wasn't a question to die-hard fans. An example would be Super Street Fighter IV launching with 10 new characters and 5 new stages for 40 dollars -- a price that is basically in-line with modern "seasons" in the worst case scenario and it can be debated that it was actually a great value when you consider all of the additional work and polish to other UI and gameplay elements.

Since roughly 2016, these practices have shifted radically. Now, games often release new characters as part of "seasons" where roughly 5 characters are released over the course of a year -- one character at a time.

So my question: Has this been effective in getting you to relaunch the game after taking a break?

My personal opinion is that this new release cadence has been a bit worse for my ability to play and enjoy fighting games after having a break. Often, I find that my biggest issue is that there's no longer a "good time" to hop back into the game.

When you only release 1 character every few months, every new update causes a vast majority of the player base to play the new character for a few days. This means that trying to play the game online will either result in a series of mirror matches or cases where you're playing against the same character consistently. This wasn't an issue when new "versions" of the game would release, as the number of new characters would often make match-ups diverse since all characters would be new simultaneously. Inversely, if you wait too long, you'll be playing against an already dried up player base of the same people who would normally play the game.

Lastly, I feel like the "new game" feeling has been completely removed, where seasons hardly make the game feel like a whole new product. There have been some pleasant surprises, like booting up Guilty Gear Strive to find a much nicer, polished looking main menu compared to launch. However, these types of changes are few and far between. Additionally, some parts of the game don't seem to change ever like the in-game UI or refinement of existing characters' gimmicks.

So what's your take on this. Do you think this new release cycle has been helpful or hurtful when it comes to regularly revisiting fighting games?

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 27 points 11 months ago

I think it's charming.

[-] MoogleMaestro@kbin.social 42 points 1 year ago

You would think, of all the communities that would be comfortable with migration, it would be the folks from /r/selfhosted!

Fellow user from there, btw, nice to see we've got a decent pool of people on this board instead.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by MoogleMaestro@kbin.social to c/gaming@kbin.social

Rashid of the Turbulent Wind makes his Street Fighter 6 debut on July 24. With a whirlwind of moves that will send him flying through each fight, Rashid leav...

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Is there a way to collapse a comment in a thread's comment section?

I don't know if there's something I'm missing or not, but it seems like I can't collapse a comment in the comment section of a post. This is kind of a big issue for me as I like to collapse comments I've read in order to keep track of comments, especially as I work my way down a comment tree.

#AskKbin

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MoogleMaestro

joined 1 year ago