Tencent has a minority stake in Larian. That’s very different from being wholly owned and managed by them.
Tencent has a minority stake in Larian. That’s very different from being wholly owned and managed by them.
Moving to an even larger company that has less experience with physical “fun” products isn’t likely to be good for the core game. D&D is already at odds with the hardcore community despite the success of the movie and BG3.They don’t need more licensed content, they need to rethink their creative process and how they interact with the core tabletop community. I just don’t see how Tencent is the place for that.
I see season 1-9 packs on both IPT and TL.
To be fair that’s a pretty recent development. Jellyfin apps for smart tvs are only just becoming stable enough for real use. Plex was the only option for a long time.
I run Lemmy, Plex, and a bunch of other services from a desktop in my basement. It works great. The Lemmy docker setup is a little finicky but works well once you get it.
There are quite a few creators who are primarily funded off patreon and release content to YouTube. I imagine a group like MCDM (Matt Colville) who has patreon, merch, crowdfunding, and products doesn’t really care about ad revenue.
I think it's a typo and they mean the decrease in gravitational force goes from exponential to linear, but continues decreasing.
I'd highly recommend adding a license file. Right now it's more source available than open source.
How far apart are your 2 communities and what size user base are you expecting?
If they're closeish there are probably some point to point network options you could experiment with for a low bandwidth backup link.
Expected users really just determines if you need things like load balancing, identity management, etc.
Until I was reading about this project I had never heard of it. And I would consider myself pretty plugged into torrent news.
The included docker compose was very easy to use. I was up and running in just a few minutes.
DHT crawling started immediately which was pretty cool to see.
Sometime later this week I'll try integrating it into my arr stack.
We will make sure that you can stay on the terms applicable for the version of Unity editor you are using – as long as you keep using that version.
They did that the last time they had backlash too and then quietly removed it a few years later. How on earth do they think that’s something anyone will trust.
My group does discord, we play on VTTs so built in voice chat was a requirement. You really don’t need to engage with any features you don’t want/need to. If you’re the only DM you can be the server owner and leave everyone else a default user.
For a more FOSS answer I think Matrix would cover basically everything that discord does. I haven’t used it that extensively but it seems to be the best discord alternative when dealing with larger groups where you may want several text channels.
If you’ve ever followed the C++ committee discussions you’ll see they put a lot of time and effort into considering legacy code when introducing language changes. For better or worse existing languages are on a trajectory set from their inception that can’t always be easily redirected. New languages are free of this baggage and can wildly experiment.
I don’t believe so. I’m not sure what their long term goals look like.
There’s no need to run an LLM on the same system it was trained on. Once the model is built it contains all the information already. If you want a model to live on long term you would just release the file(s) publicly, like hugging face does with theirs, then anyone could use it or host an interface for it.
Unless they start offering on-prem or there are some very high profile server hacks I don’t see that being possible. Unlike media and client software they don’t need to provide the core functionality to end users, just the output.
If your org is all Windows there’s not really an easier way to make Windows desktop applications than c# and .NET with winforms. If a team is making any internal tools for Windows users there’s a good chance that’s what they’ll be using.
Your instance would have connection logs for whatever browsers or mobile apps you used, but other instances talk directly to yours and know nothing about you. So use an instance hosted in a jurisdiction you’re comfortable with or like you said tor or another basic vpn is plenty to anonymize you.
2024.1.6 was released on Tuesday. That’s what the stable image tag appears to be on at the moment.
Doesn’t look like anything exceptional, just some bug fixes: https://github.com/home-assistant/core/releases/tag/2024.1.6