The MCU (“Mythos Cinematic Universe”) may apparently become a thing https://bloody-disgusting.com
The MCU (“Mythos Cinematic Universe”) may apparently become a thing https://bloody-disgusting.com
I once watched my (teenage) niece playing Magic Tiles 3 on her tablet. It’s a free musical game that’s pretty fun, but it has lots of marketing videos interrupting gameplay all the time. Since one of my kids wanted to play it, I ask her if there’s a purchasable version, or another similar game that I can buy and that wouldn’t have the annoying ads.
She looks at me, slightly confused. “I don’t know about any game that doesn’t have ads. There’s no such thing, I think”.
So yeah, that’s what you’re up against, game developers.
Although it’s somewhat ironic that this article was written on Medium, this is a very good rant on obsolescence of files:
I love files. I love renaming them, moving them, sorting them, changing how they’re displayed in a folder, backing them up, uploading them to the internet, restoring them, copying them, and hey, even defragging them. As a metaphor for a way of storing a piece of information, I think they’re great. I like the file as a unit of work. If I need to write an article, it goes in a file. If I need to produce an image, it’s in a file.
I also love files. That’s why I put them in a NAS. And then I have another NAS to backup the first NAS. That’s why my blog is essentially generated from a bunch of files, and why my notes are in a wiki that’s also generated from a bunch of files. Files are easy to edit, store, version, backup, recover. Sure, they don’t scale very well to giant online services, but for personal use, they’re the absolute best in my opinion. Of course, they’re also the worst for companies who want to lock you in and profit from your data under cover of “convenience”.
But Apple doesn’t make it that easy to get to your files. Images are dumped into a big stream, sorted by date. Audio is somewhere in iTunes. Notes are… in a list? Apps are scattered around the desktop. Some of my files are in iCloud. You can email photos to liberate them from the iPhone, and through a convoluted method via iTunes, you can access some files within certain apps. But those files are transitory — cached, and may be deleted without warning. These aren’t like the carefully crafted files and folders on my computer.
This one of the reasons I have a love/hate relationship with my iOS devices. And if you look at the number of apps that support some Dropbox or Box integration or similar, I don’t think I’m the only one. I’m actually not even sure Dropbox would have been as popular if Apple had initially released iOS with friendly support for moving files in and out of the device. Most of the apps I use on a regular basis on my iPad are ones that can interact with the files in my home network, like Plex or GoodReader. I refuse to store stuff on iCloud (except as a form of extra backup), regardless of how many times Apple insists on running advertisements on my phone in the form of notifications you can’t disable1.
Anyway, read the whole article, as it’s making several other interesting points on the subject.
Bottom-line: I also miss files. We eventually got the big companies to sell music as DRM-free files, but it looks like it’s never going to happen for video. Everything is a cloud subscription service, now. Everything is streaming. Everything is a timeline. It’s not just about files going extinct, it’s about the very concept of “ownership” going obsolete.
Apple has been getting worse on that front, lately. ↩︎
Phantom of the Paradise, one of my top 5 movies of all time, turned 45 last week! https://bloody-disgusting.com
So I went from “I’m not a miniatures guy, I just have a few I gathered over the years" to “I received a Battlefoam PACK720 to better store all that stuff and holy fuck it’s almost full already how did this happen”.
Sex is nice and all, but have you tried to completely sort out your cable management solution for your home office?
Good news for Call of Cthulhu on Halloween! https://www.enworld.org
And just like that, I’m probably now known by the postman as “that weird guy who receives a whole bunch of packages in his robe and PJs”
That’s a super good idea, but I would have loved to first see Compass Cards give us access to the False Creek ferries…
https://www.vancouverisawesome.com
It’s not the first time the developer of Notepad++ (which I use as a secondary editor behind vim) released a politically-charged version of the software… I remember getting a chuckle out of the “yellow jacket edition”, which referenced a series of French protests against the current French government.
I don’t remember any of the previous versions making the news, however, or attracting this kind of attention:
While the protest may have been innocuous enough, it hasn’t played out that way online. Since the announcement, the software’s GitHub “issues” page has been bombarded with spam, much of it in the Chinese language.
This made me also notice that the Notepad++ website has changed looks last month for the first time in 8 years. Looking good. Good luck to the developer.