@furgar
I mean... let's be honest here. We all knew what was gonna happen. But it was still a tense moment to see what would happen and how she'd react.
@nonetrix
If you're gonna learn an audio API, go directly for PipeWire. PulseAudio is gonna be phased out.
@abloo
NAT wasn't even what I had in mind. Here's the thing, the big boogeyman of why IPv6 was being pushed so much some time ago was the development of smartphones and other IoT devices. But we've slowly discovered that most of the time smartphones get their internet from a WiFi network instead of the cell tower. Meaning, most of the time, you don't actually need a dedicated IP address for your phone. So phone ISPs can just dynamically allocate and deallocate IP addresses as needed.If at any one time no more than 30% of your users actually use cell internet, why get IPs for 100% of the users? You can easily get by with 40-50% and switch the IP to someone else when they're not using it.
Heck, since you're not gonna host servers from your phone anyway, it's even easier to do NAT for phones and save up even more IPv4 addresses. (I know for a fact phone providers seem to do this in my country, so not unreasonable to think they're doing it in lots of other places).
The fact is, the IPv4 crisis has been averted simply because we've discovered we're not actually using phones, tablets, laptops, and other devices like we thought we would be using them 15-20 years ago. In the earlier days of the internet, we would think that every internet device needed it's own unique IP. But in reality, you can have, at home, half a dozen smartphones, a couple of tablets, laptops, a PC or two, a console, and countless other IoT devices, all connected to the internet, with only 1 public IP, and everything working just fine. And in fact, we're used to preferring this setup as it can provide a bit more security from outside attacks.
I don't know if in America, or other parts of the world the transition was actually needed because providers simply didn't have enough IPv4 addresses bought, but where I live, I've yet to see an IPv6. And ISPs here are still equipped well enough to provide very fast internet, so it's not a "we're too cheap to upgrade equipment" issue either.
P.S. As for connecting to IPv6 servers, that could very much be a bad server config problem as much an ISP thing. Just don't jump to conclusions.
@nonetrix
That's fine. I'm more interested in TES 6. Also HL3, but that one will come out right before the heat death of the universe.
@neo
I'm not sure if the game is stable on Windows yet.
@RoyalJohnny242 @Natanahel
Finally someone that makes sense. My pet peeve with Undertale is that it's not really a game, it's more of a meta-game. You don't win it by playing, you win it by reading the walkthrough that tells you to do a no violence run the first time around, a medium violence run the second time and a complete violence run the third time.
@mushroom_soup
@Awoo@neckbeard.xyz @TheAncestor Your assistance is required.
@abloo
Why support it if you can dynamically allocate IPv4 in ways so that you don't run out of them?
@fluffy
Just woke up, so nothing in particular. Any soap smell probably faded off hours ago.
@mushroom_soup
It all stems from feminism, that seems to have taught people to never take responsibility for their actions.
@Wisconsin_Kraut @Awoo@neckbeard.xyz
She's beautiful enough that I'd want her in my life. But she also looks a bit like a thot, so she can't be gf or wife material. Only reasonable choice is sister.
@critical @nosleep@neckbeard.xyz
I doubt it's the water, since he's not a fricking frog, but something is definitely going on. We need Alex Jones on this, asap.
@emilis
First you ask people to kiss, now you ask them to dance with you... I see what you're doing and I'm not gonna fall for it!
なんで君はこれを読んでいるかよ
Just another random person passing by.
Oh hi.
The Alyx Vance must go this way anyway.
Gordon Freeman dies in All Dogs Go To Heaven 2.
I wasn't designed to be carried.
En Taro Igel!
Lift me up, let me go...