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Cake day: March 8th, 2024

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  • Man, I am as frustrated with Nvidia as anybody, but that type of vaguely-informed ranting really makes me go on the defensive.

    For one thing, the dumb gatekeeping at the end is absurd. I’ve been building PCs since the early 90s, there are more informed users now than there have ever been, by far. And those that aren’t regurgitate whatever they hear on Youtube from tech influencers anyway. Fortnite casuals aren’t what’s keeping you from owning a 5090, friend.

    Speaking of uninformed users regurgitating half-understood Youtube talking points, Nvidia certainly wasn’t going to ship 5090s with a single damaged ROP unit as 5080s, those two cards are built on entirely different dies. It’s very likely that they’ll have some 5080SuperTi thing coming out eventually perhaps built on cut down GB202 instead of the GB203 in the base model, but it’d certainly not be cutting down an ROP and leaving everything else the same. That’s not even the 5090D spec. Plus Nvidia confirms other cards in the 50 series are also affected.

    More importantly, neither of us knows how these made it to market. There’s certainly at the very least some lax QA, and I’m sure there was pressure to get as many of the very limited 5090s to retail as possible, but crappy as the 50 series is in many areas I genuinely doubt Nvidia would be so dumb as to deliberately putting chips with this very specific, very consistent fault in the pipes hoping nobody would notice a performance drop and peek at GPU-Z even once. That’s not how this works. I’d love to know what actually happened to cause this, though.

    So yes, the 40 and 50 series are named one step too high on the stack. Yes, the pricing increases have been wild, and it’s frustrating that demand is high enough to support it and regulators aren’t stepping in to moderate the MSRP mishandling. Yes, Nvidia mismanaged the 50 series launch in multiple ways, from bad connector design to rushing the 5090 to misleading marketing on frame generation and probably underbaked drivers. That doesn’t mean every issue is the same issue, and it certainly doesn’t mean that a lack of “knowledgeable users” is to blame.




  • They wrote a nazi manifesto, it got reported on widely, they barely denied it and they won anyway.

    Nothing that is happening on their end is the slightest bit unexpected, so I’m just isolating myself from America and Americans as much as I can until I don’t get a choice. However, when I see things like ths post by accident I do feel a remarkable urge to grab anybody who expresses disappointment or surprise and shake them by the lapels until they pass out.







  • There aren’t any of those, but we do have a centre-left government (for now), we’re doing alright economically and still have a semblance of a social security safety net.

    Mostly what it feels like is that the US and Russia are now both adversaries and this lasts only until their disinformation warfare wins the day or they attack us directly otherwise. We’re not “safe” because we’re not safe from you and the other couple of idiots that are still married to the old “superpower” idea. If you want to know how I feel, then, it’s mostly “really, really angry at any liberal of leftist that did not show up for Harris the way they did for Biden or Obama”.

    So there’s that.


  • Hah. Welcome, kink sharer, it is weird here.

    Mostly my big hot take with leverless stuff is that I much prefer the WASD configuration using keyboard switches (like the Haute/Cosmox boards, which are my current leverless choice).

    My brain should be friendly to the thumb-to-jump stuff, since I was a micro and PC gamer in the nineties and I’m no stranger to QAOP/Space platformers, but for some reason I just can’t parse it in all-arcade-switch leverless devices. WASD just works better for me, especially outside of fighting games where jump is mapped to a face button anyway.

    These days you can get more of these, and you can also find WASD keys and arcade face buttons (I have one of those from FightBox, which I do like, although be warned that the slim version uses keyboard switches for both sides). I think I’m still way in the minority here.

    I guess it’s also a hot take that leverless is my primary choice for all 2D games, not just fighting games. In fact, I’ve been going back to fight sticks for fighting games, but leverless is just so nice for 2D platformers, metroidvanias and retro console games.


  • First off, I didn’t know the guy’s name is “Kovid”. It must have been a very weird five years for him.

    Second, this is an amazing piece of text and I will show it to people to explain why having engineers make design decisions is often a terrible idea.

    I genuinely believe there is a strong correlation between FOSS projects getting structured and well funded enough to hire designers and their chance of taking over as the default choice against commercial projects. If UX designers were as interested in volunteer work as engineers the software landscape would be completely different.



  • I mean, sure, if you just have different flavours of the same PC parts put together in slightly different configurations they are relatively redundant.

    But the Vita is very much not that. It has cameras, microphones, not one but two touch surfaces, gyroscope inputs and a wildly different config of contemporaneous hardware that required adaptations in many ports.

    “Identical” is a high bar. I don’t think it’s uninteresting to be able to check out what is different in, say, the Vita version of Wipeout or Metal Gear HD or LittleBigPlanet. Plus there are also many of exclusives or very different releases on Vita. Tearaway is very much not the same on PS4, Virtua Tennis 4 has unique features on Vita (and is otherwise stuck on PS4 anyway), Uncharted never even got ported up. There are unique entries of Dynasty Warriors, Killzone, Resistance and Silent Hill in there…

    I get that it’s challenging hardware to emulate and a lot of people don’t give it enough credit, but it is certainly not a platform that is trivialized by identical hardware elsewhere.



  • Count me in for CRTs and old consoles.

    I also used a Dualshock 4 specifically for a couple of fighting games until all the dumb micro USBs gave up the ghost. It just worked better than the DS5 for me for some reason just for this specific application.

    Controllers are a place where I’m fairly odd and obsessive, in general. I still have fight sticks for the Mega Drive/Genesis and the PsOne. I firmly believe the chunky Sega Saturn controller with the handles is way superior to the bone controller that everybody keeps mimicking, unfortunately. The couple I still have in working order are deeply cherished. I have all sorts of weird, tiny modern controllers, and I still have a PS3 fightpad from the launch of Street Fighter IV. And don’t get me started on my hot takes on leverless controllers.

    I’m old, my hands hurt and I’ve gone down some rabbit holes.



  • I have a sizable collection of legitimately procured ebooks, it’s not that rare if you prioritize it.

    But I agree, it’s not about hardware. There are plenty of super premium eink displays these days. I don’t even want integration with a eink reader at all. I’m happy reading off an OLED screen in a tablet. All I need is convenient library, management and display software that will handle both text and comic book formats.

    Everybody seems to be trying to mimic the Kindle ecosystem with all its quirks and hardware dependencies when what I really want is book Plex.