It has a very high opinion of itself.
Break the beef into smaller pieces first so the germs can't find it.
Not to be disrespectful but you can skip to 5:32 if you don't need to justify piracy to yourself.
"If you don't wear Special Clothes around me I'm going to lose it."
When are we going to move past costuming for work?
"Project Silica’s goal is to write data in a piece of glass and store it on a shelf until it is needed. Once written, the data inside the glass is impossible to change."
Very important note here.
The main thing I don't get is that the top talent at your company are the ones that can easily find another job instead of putting up with your BS. The people that aren't competent enough to leave on a whim are the ones you're going to be keeping.
This is a rare and extreme case, which is probably caused by some sort of fluke in the testing method or due to a bug in the game that Linux is handling better. Usually gaming on Linux is like ~5-10% slower for GPU-bound games.
Now I can finally download a game 100000x to bankrupt a game company, just like they always said we could.
Maintaining existing CSS is hard. Luckily, usurping all of social media as an "everything app" will be trivial by comparison.
A shortlist:
- it has the best lossy image compression (not counting extremely low bitrate images, where AVIF starts to win)
- it can losslessly recompress JPEGs for a free 20% space savings - no image quality loss
- it supports parallel decoding for extra speed
- it supports progressive decoding (viewing a lower quality version of the image while it loads), unlike WebP/AVIF which just "pop up" when you've downloaded the whole thing
- it supports lossless
- it compresses lossless extremely well (notably unlike AVIF and PNG which fall on their face with lossless compression)
- it supports animation (though AVIF is generally a better format for animation, because it's based on a proper video codec)
- it supports HDR
- it has a very strong resilience against generation loss (the classic "JPEG degradation" of resaving images)
- it is royalty-free
- it otherwise has roughly every image format feature we've ever thought of included in its spec
If JXL is not the next image format then we will never ever get rid of JPEG and PNG. There has never been a more obviously superior image format in history.
This might help: Image format comparison table
It's possible. I think the biggest obstacle is that the corporations feeding on people's data are not going to just stand by while it happens.
I feel piracy for demo purposes is fully justified if you buy it after you like it. People always say vote with your wallet but it's more like gambling with your wallet if you don't get to see and touch the product before you make the purchase. Giving proper demos should be more common with digital media.