Adding 'language' or 'programming' to the search query should solve it. Anyway Google seem to retain context when searching certain topics.
But yeah there's definitely room for improvement and creativity here.
I bet someday in the future new fans of the game will find the art style so fresh. Ron is an artist and true to his craft.
As a fan of the game series I can't wait to see what's in store.
I think the artwork is unique and will attract newcomers, instead of repeating what's already there and serving only the "hardcore fans" who threw all that hate.
Agreed, although I think the genre is mostly popular as pixel art retro style, especially that he made thimbleweed park that way.. that's probably why they wanted a different art style.
Personally I think Ron is an artist and I'll buy whatever he's selling.
Yes it's true, we already use Redis for several workloads and operations so it's not really an extra thing to manage, on the contrary we don't need to learn about say rabbitmq and manage it, just worry about Redis.
Why do you consider it bad for local dev? A Redis instance literally takes 1MB memory when started.
At our company we use Redis, it's lightweight and has list structure which can be used as a push/pop queue
The basic gist of it is that on one end a producer pushes to the list and a consumer(s) on the other end pops the job and executes it. Fire and forget style.
HoMM3 was soo interesting to me when I first saw it, I thought it was like chess (dumbed down) and a boardgame. The mythology was also like a reference to me. I played it for so many hours when I was a teenager.
I played HoMM4 and HoMM5 also. HoMM4 felt like an incomplete game but very nice to play.
HoMM4 has an amazing soundtrack, I occasionally still play it while working.
I think recently there was an imitation of the game on mobile, and we all know how bad that would probably be given the horrible game mechanics of mobile gaming (ads, play to win, waiting to build)
For fire and forget type jobs you can use lists instead of pub/sub: save a job to a list by a producer, pop it on the other end by a consumer and execute it. It's also very easy to scale, just start more producers and consumers.
We're currently using this technique, to process ~2M jobs per day, and we're just getting started. Redis needs very little memory for this, just a few mb.
I once copied the following comment from another post here, I find it spot on:
"I’ve a few different approaches I take depending on the task (and if I’m honest, my mood or levels of motivation):
- a new programming language, especially something closer to a systems language, I have a standard set of things I’ll try to implement. Read/write a file. Turn a structured object into JSON, parse JSON to an object. Basic script that can be run from CLI, parses flags/args, reads stdin. Send a HTTP request. Implement the most basic web server."
I doubt that the official number of 5m is accurate anyway, it's probably much less.
My grandma passed away last year, cause of death was registered as covid even though we all knew that it wasn't.
I've heard about many similar to stories similar to mine
I've also heard that hospitals can make money out of it.
Looks very interesting, but I'd rather go with something based on Android maybe?
And what's up with the meditation timer? That sounds like bloatware, made me lose interest
Cost is the most important factor, after that comes finding a space, most people live in buildings in the city, one roof won't be enough for all the apartments. Houses are usually in villages.
People are getting interested by seeing it work for their neighbors and friends, it's still new and people want see some garuntee for such a long term investment.
How would you describe the income level of the clients you shipped solar panels to? Were they building a new house?
It's starting to kick off, several households are implementing it, it costs $5k+ here which given the current situation isn't the top priority
But honestly I do hope we reach a point where private solar and wind take over the main grid and the generators