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dejected_warp_core, do games w US government uses Halo images in a call to 'destroy' immigration, Microsoft declines to comment

I’m actually starting to think it’s on purpose. Just like with spam email with misspellings and the kind of ear-marks that warns off smart people, the only ones left to click on “win a free iphone” are easily duped. Going after people that are drawn in by iconography and optics, but fail to understand nuance and the substance behind them, may be entirely the point.

dejected_warp_core, do games w US government uses Halo images in a call to 'destroy' immigration, Microsoft declines to comment

Just like with Starship Troopers, satire like this goes flying over people’s heads so low and fast, it breaks the sound barrier and loosens dentalwork.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w What game changed your life?

That’s impressive. I know a lot of games struggle to find a good balance between gameplay and simulation. But to heap historical accuracy and storytelling on top of that, and have it be a worthwhile experience, is a feat.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w What game changed your life?

Whoa. A Jumpman reference in the wild. Thank you for reminding me. But I have no idea what that string of characters means. :(

The sound of the player taking a tumble off the stage, followed by a death march, has been forever seared into my brain. Watching my uncle play this, helped little_warp_core understand the limitless potential of (home) video games, above and beyond the likes of crappy Asteroids and Pac-Man ports.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w What game changed your life?

Braid.

The game itself is brilliant. The story and message within is heartfelt, heartbreaking, and un-apologetically autobiographical. Up until that point, I knew gaming was a good storytelling medium, but not for something this moving.

dejected_warp_core, do games w what video game deserves to be in a museum?

On the home-gamer gameplay side, this is a solid list. On the technology side, I think there’s even more that makes sense for a curated museum tour. There were big leaps made in arcade tech through the 80’s and 90’s that were pushing all manner of graphics and sound, head-and-shoulders above the previous generation.

Sega’s “super scaler” boards come to mind, allowing for games like Hang-on, Outrun, and After Burner. Digitized sound samples started with Sinistar and Tempest. Dragon’s Lair amazed everyone with an interactive LaserDisc experience. There were also notable forays into AR with Time Traveler, and VR with Virutality. Lastly, we have the fully-enclosed and immersive cockpit of early Battletech simulators.

dejected_warp_core, do games w First they came for steam, then they came for itch.io .

This is exactly like the pearl-clutching we had back in the 1980’s around D&D and music lyrics. At least we moved the goalpost from satanic panic and thinly-veiled racism, over to “art that features sexual expression I don’t understand.”

If history is any indicator, their actions are only going to increase awareness of this kind of stuff.

dejected_warp_core, do games w Ubisoft EULA demanding consumers destroy delisted games adds fuel to Stop Killing Games movement

The best take on Black Flag I ever read was something like: “It’s a great game, except for all the Assassin’s Creed parts.”

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

Exactly. Access was a dirt-cheap rapid application design (RAD) tool in disguise, and very easily could have been shaped into a smooth on-ramp to ASP, ASPX, IIS, and SqlServer solutions. In short: a hypothetical “Access.NET” would have been really something.

On the other hand, now we have a super easy jumping point for anyone in a large business who can program a little to spin up a new startup. Find a business process that’s currently a spreadsheet/on paper, write a database frontend to easily handle that then sell your solution to businesses looking to remove load bearing paperwork and spreadsheets

You just described most of my career, and how a lot of contracting shops get their start. Managers need reports, and someone has to program them. I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve replaced Excel with custom software; a faster way to do this is usually welcome. That said, the cloud “Data” space is doing a lot right now to reduce this kind of task to Jupyter notebooks and some other proprietary solutions.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

Access let you build visual apps, usually data-entry workflows, around its internal SQL database. You could build small apps with it using Visual Basic and a visual UI editor. Plus, all your work ships as a single file, provided the user also has Access installed. In many ways, it was like Apple’s Hypercard, but also way easier to write than webpages with the same capability. Oh, and you don’t need a server anywhere to make it work; it’s 100% local. It was also the next logical step to take after the most complex things you can do in Excel.

That said, it was crippled from the start - still very useful, but not for heavyweight stuff. It’s limited to a fixed number of UI, pages, database rows, etc, so it wouldn’t compete with more expensive MS solutions (this thing came with Office). I don’t think it got a lot of love because of that, but I personally used it to solve some real problems in the workplace, without need of any (official) developer resources.

In the present day, it would actually compete with a lot of simple business cases that are served in the cloud at some cost.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

Excel-sior!

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

Alas, Access was too powerful to make the transition to the cloud. It couldn’t be allowed to survive.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

Let me make One Note here since you Power-Pointed that out.

dejected_warp_core, do gaming w Microsoft Office gonna wreck your shit

I think there’s enough for way more than that if we dip into the whole O365 suite.

dejected_warp_core, do games w Stardew Valley creator says he might make Stardew Valley 2
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