Maybe it’s not changed then because I was using it in the early 2000s. 😀
Maybe it’s not changed then because I was using it in the early 2000s. 😀
We used to use Redmine and it was a fantastic piece of software.
You’re right about the glowy baseball bats but I think that Jedi combat is a tough one to pull off well. You can force pull any of the lower enemies into a one shot with the light sabre as it is and there’s no reason that you shouldn’t be able to do that with all human sized enemies that aren’t force users except that it would make for a dull game.
The loot is shit but I don’t know what more a Jedi needs other than armour or blasters but they don’t really use them. It is very weird that I had to find something in a box for me to get the idea to not shave my beard so close.
Wipeout 2048 was my favourite of all time and is available in the Wipeout Omega Collection. I wouldn’t say that it’s better than the more recent titles but it was just the one that grabbed me.
I also really liked:
I’m not sure that’s the fault of XML though.
It’s more the fault of the implementation and documentation.
We have a WCF service with an odd configuration and nobody has been able to integrate with it that didn’t use Microsoft tools. It’s definitely not XML’s fault.
(That service has been replaced with a REST API now)
When I played games on my PC I ended up spending more time configuring my Steam controller than I did playing the game.
A classic example of perfect being the enemy of good.
It seems that they intend Microsoft Loop to be the collaborative notes app now.
It’s replaced OneNote as the meeting notes app and it has more flexible access control.
Currently they also only have one version as it’s a progressive web app (that might change with time though).
Surely, any company that has made a financial decision to not fix something because fixing it is more expensive than paying compensation to the relatives of people they kill should be guilty of murder.
If they kill more than five or ten people it would be mass murder and probably subject to the death penalty.
Boeing would be getting worried right now if this was how it worked.
I guess that that’s all that matters.
Did it take time to get used to or did it work straight away?
I’m like that too. I can’t think or move fast enough for RTS but don’t have the patience for really thinking things through in turn based games.
Maybe the in between would be turn based with a time limit per turn.
Nor can I but I think that’s the fault of the app I’m using rather than it being a GIF.
I like the scope creep there:
Won’t autocomplete fail if you do “cd d” and then try the autocomplete?
Or is that what you mean by “decent” auto-completion?
That bed is a Murphy bed that folds up into that cabinet at the head of the bed. The straps aren’t to hold a person in place, they hold the mattress and bedding in place when it’s packed away.