ProdigalFrog
A frog who wants the objective truth about anything and everything.
Admin of SLRPNK.net
XMPP: [email protected]
- 2.24K Posts
- 2.87K Comments
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
RetroGaming•Video Game development throughout the 80s (Short Documentary)English
2·9 days agoGlad you enjoyed! :)
I’ll be posting more of StrafeFox’s stuff here, they’re criminally lesser known considering the consistent quality of their videos.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPMto
Pixel Art@retrolemmy.com•Impressive examples of how dramatically CRT TV's transformed older pixel artEnglish
4·9 days agoI don’t know how much artists were drawing, compiling for the console and viewing on a TV to make pixel by pixel adjustments.
It’s inevitably highly variable, but many computers at the time supported composite-out natively, as it couldn’t always be guaranteed that a consumer would be able to afford a dedicated monitor as well. This was less common on PC’s, but Amiga’s (Deluxe Paint’s native environment) and Atari ST’s both came with composite out built-in. It wouldn’t have been difficult at the time for an artist at a game studio to mirror their high-definition monitor output on a standard composite TV to have a real-time comparison, and make adjustments to suit the fuzzyness of a consumer TV.
The bigger Japanese studios developing for the home-consoles of the 80’s and 90’s would’ve had access to custom development hardware and software specific to each console, but even then, they would usually have a lower-res TV nearby to see how their zoomed in sprite-work on an RGB monitor would translate to a TV, you can see an example of that from a dev-station at nintento, working on Mario 3:

(Picture source is from this video, which goes into more detail on how games were developed in that period).
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
Not The Onion•Republicans Complain That Cars Have Become Too Safe, Say It Must Be ReversedEnglish
2·15 days agoAgreed, but a 13 year old Nissan leaf is rather old at this point (which is a good thing!), and is affordable. The person I was responding to implied that there are current production cars without tracking, but they are just unaffordable to most, which I found confusing, as I struggle to come up with a modern current production vehicle that doesn’t track the user regardless of it being basic affordable transportation or a Ferrari.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
Not The Onion•Republicans Complain That Cars Have Become Too Safe, Say It Must Be ReversedEnglish
5·16 days agoBesides kit cars or deliberately older designed cars like a Morgan Stanley, what modern cars have no driver tracking? The only one I’m aware of is the Slate EV.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPMto
MealtimeVideos Cafe@lemmy.cafe•Soldier Stew: Revolutionary War Survival Food [9:36]English
1·16 days agoOr some good 'ol fashioned pine liqour.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
Solarpunk@slrpnk.net•How to make the most out of 12v DC heated blankets and be comfortable in cold weatherEnglish
6·18 days agoI was surprised to learn a year ago that window AC units with heatpump heating are now available. I imagine they’re a good option when combined with a good window seal.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPtoFull movies on YouTube@piefed.social•Split Second (1992 1080p) Rutger Hauer - a buddy cop climate-dystopia action horror about a PTSD-riddled cop hunting down a heart-eating creature in the flooded streets of LondonEnglish
3·20 days agoDarn. I got one more to try, but it isn’t lookin’ good :(
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
Not The Onion•Campbell’s Soup VP mocks ‘poor people’ who buy its food in secret recordingEnglish
6·21 days agoI’m not sure if it’s just that my palate became more picky as I’ve gotten older, but I remember canned soups being pretty decent as a kid. Nowadays I usually cook my own food, but recently I’ve been trying canned soups again, and I’m astonished how bad most brands are. Campbells or Progresso are either bland or taste actively terrible. The only ones I’ve tried that actually taste good are usually kinda expensive, like Amy’s or Snow’s.
Curious if anyone here who was an adult 20 or 30 years ago can confirm that affordable canned soups tasted better in the past, or if my memory is deceiving me.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
Lemmy Shitpost•The ancient Greeks or Chinese should have already had words for this.English
2·21 days agoIt’s not that they don’t process words, it’s that those without internal monologues may think in concepts, images, or visualized actions rather than using the words those concepts are attached to. As an example, some deaf people if they have an internalized monologue have reported their monologue being visualized sign language, instead of audible speech spoken in their head. There’s quite a lot of variability in how someone processes their internal thoughts.
Some without internal monologues have mentioned that they can vocalize text in their head, but only if done consciously, and they usually find that it would make reading agonizingly slow to do so for them.
Simon Roper does a couple really excellent videos on this subject, if you’d like to hear a very eloquent first hand experience of someone else’s non-monologue internal thoughts.
Also @[email protected]
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPtoFull movies on YouTube@piefed.social•Split Second (1992 1080p) Rutger Hauer - a buddy cop climate-dystopia action horror about a PTSD-riddled cop hunting down a heart-eating creature in the flooded streets of LondonEnglish
2·21 days agoDoes the alternative link to the 4k censored version work?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YXtBdpE2zU4
There’s also this link:
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
5·22 days agoThat’s a good point. I went back to the video to rewatch it, and turns out I totally missed where they said they only freeze things during a testing phase, then unfreeze it after they’re done and allow updates to commence as normal.
They mentioned that due to Linux receiving more frequent updates often with meaningful performance improvements, they’ll have to throw away older data and re-test more often on Linux, as Windows doesn’t really change much in performance between updates. So I would guess that they would use release drivers with new cards, and likely would only re-test their entire suite if the release driver also gave a big performance boost on older cards.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
5·22 days agoAFAIK, It’s not an issue of automated testing, and I don’t believe they re-test all their cards on Windows with every new review either. Instead, they maintain the same versions of software on Windows as well until enough time has passed and enough updates have piled up that they do finally re-test everything with new games to create a new dataset to compare against. They’re trying to do the same methodology on Linux.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
12·22 days agoWithout re-testing their entire suite of cards for every new card review (which is cost prohibitive), performance changing from updates would make the comparisons between cards less useful, as it cannot be determined if the newer card being tested is better or worse purely on the merits of the hardware itself, since newer software may be artificially making it look better or worse than the tested cards that came before, and thus the actual integrity and usefulness of the testing comes into question.
They are trying to assemble a like-for-like dataset that doesn’t require their entire catalog of cards to be regularly retested to ensure that it remains like-for-like. Keeping all the software the same across tests ensures that they can add new data piecemeal and still retain an apples-to-apples comparison.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
2·22 days agoI’ve seen the ancient gameplays video you linked, but there is very little out there for linux vs windows benchmarks that are of high quality.
The video I linked is 2 months old, only focuses on graph data (no gameplay videos) across both AMD and NVidia cards and multiple distros. It’s quite high quality IMHO. Are you confusing it with something else?
EDIT: I just realized you’re referring to the name of his youtube channel. D’oh!
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
12·22 days agoGamersNexus’ normal GPU benchmark videos are to help gamers compare GPU performance on various games to determine what they should purchase for their needs. With this new video, they are now providing the same service for Linux Gamers going forward.
The goal of this video was not to compare Windows performance to Linux performance. There are videos that exist which do that, if that is what you’re were hoping for.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
1·22 days agodeleted by creator
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
5·22 days agoPersonally, in this case I think the title itself is enough info to determine if it’s an interesting enough topic to visit the youtube page to then read the description for more info before clicking play. Some lemmy clients even provide the youtube description in the post itself (the desktop Lemmy-UI only shows a short preview of the description).
For videos that don’t have a simple premise and are difficult to capture in a short post title, I sometimes add a longer description and my own thoughts in the post body (such as when I post movies to [email protected]), but for videos like this, which is quite straight forward, I don’t feel the need to summarize their methodology of the benchmarks, since it’s there in the video for those interested, but most will be more interested in the benchmark data itself.
A brief statement on how the OS used may be detrimental to windows would have been useful, for example.
This testing is not comparative to Windows benchmarks, it is only testing and comparing benchmarks on Linux between different GPUs. This is sort’ve a big deal, because GamersNexus is known for extremely rigorous and consistent testing, to the point where all in it cost them 10K in labor to fully set up their Linux testing suite. Long term this is a great boon to Linux gamers for deciding what hardware to purchase for their needs.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netOPto
Linux Gaming•RIP Windows: Linux GPU Gaming Benchmarks on Bazzite (GamersNexus new Linux Benchmarking is here!)English
81·22 days agoI’m not sure what advantage a summary of benchmarks across multiple games would bring, or how that amount of data could be summarized.
ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.netto
memes•You can shove that lightsaber deep up in your Death Star.English
2·22 days agoIf you skipped Andor because of that, I’d highly recommend at least considering that one. I thought it was an incredible short series with fantastic writing, and that’s coming from someone who basically hates anything other than the OG trilogy.
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Another advantage of XMPP is that it can do encrypted calls, where as Deltachat has no call functionality, it only offers video or audio messages that can be uploaded to the encrypted chat.
The QR code connection thing, encryption by-default combined with a reliable universal app that works on all platforms, and email being difficult for state-actors to block are nice features of Deltachat, though.
It seems both have their place at the moment. It’d be nice if XMPP could eventually adopt the good parts of Deltachat.