dansalva.to
Creator of Doki Doki Literature Club. Founder and developer @ Team Salvato, @frankerfacez.com, and more. Currently working on various new projects.
https://dansalva.to
Reach out: [email protected]
70 posts
5,835 followers
84 following
Regular Contributor
Active Commenter
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Yes, but you know you've also written `for smp in [smp for ins in xm.ins for smp in ins.smp]` because it saves you one (1) indentation level
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That scene, the whole scene in Serizawa's lab, was the climax of the movie for me. I was holding back tears during that song.
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Hey, thanks for enjoying FFZ. I'll do my best to get your suggestion added. If you're up for it, can you email me to tell me more about your usage and experiences? I also want to add an "Accessibility" section where we can easily list features that contribute to accessibility.
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This is great, I really hope to see Zig become a viable language/toolchain for more retro hardware. It's my own dream to be able to compile Zig code for Amiga, but I have very little experience with compiler toolchains so I'm in over my head. Maybe I can learn something from your project.
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Maybe this is an unpopular opinion because "it's all in good fun", "it's parody", etc. It's the money that bothers me. Paying to play a GIF of Bart Simpson is one thing, but paying to hear a Bart TTS whose voice trained on every single episode of the Simpsons? That voice actor's entire portfolio?
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@adef.bsky.social I give you permission to steal my idea
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Alright fine, I've convinced myself that it's primarily for mouse functionality given that they show the Joy-Cons sliding face-down on the table, and also because I remembered Mario Maker exists. But mark my words that Nintendo is going to use it for air hockey or something
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I can't help but feel like we're missing something, because Nintendo likes to add features that offer new and interesting styles of play. Maybe devs have the option of using it for a mouse pointer if they really want, but I expect Nintendo themselves to find more interesting uses for it.
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I see that there is this interesting optical sensor-looking thing on the inside edge of each Joy-Con. Some are speculating that it's to be used as a mouse, but I feel skeptical about that. It could just be similar to the Switch's IR sensor? Maybe it *could* be used as a mouse if devs really wanted.
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The errors are a set of known patterns, meaning a hard-coded formatting suggester/validator would be a lot more accurate and efficient than handing it over to a machine learning model. "AI" is imperfect by design and can streamline using a tool, but it cannot replace learning how the tool works.
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I looked it up recently myself and it seems the best method is to use a table, styled to not draw edges except for the bottom edge on the form fields. It enables uniformity and is easy to edit, plus I would imagine it's great when converting to PDF because the form field has obvious defined bounds.
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How does Siri just not feel any closer to its original promise after literally 13 years on the market
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Thanks Auth, that really means a lot coming from you!
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Amiga 500
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I'm down, I arrive tomorrow evening. I really like drafting though, any interest in getting a group together to do a draft? I'd buy a box for it
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Look for the Amiga starting tomorrow evening đź‘€
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Yep, I'll probably just remove the "business" prefix to help indicate that it's an open inbox.
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I try to respond to all my emails, please feel free to email me a list of questions. I'm happy to answer what I can. I appreciate your support as well!
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I had that impression as well. I'm sure there are mail servers that act as a proxy to help alleviate this sort of thing, which partially defeats the purpose, but I guess it still upholds the principle of owning your data.
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Nobody will believe I'm really from the future once I tell them that network printers actually work
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Maybe someday, but I think it's one of those things where we have to pick our battles. Would be interested in hearing about the experiences of others who have gone the homelab route.
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Do the inputs need to be simultaneous, or are you just switching back and forth?
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It's becoming increasingly popular for devs to make new games for retro systems—not just for fun, but even commercially. It's really fascinating and deserves more attention that our favorite old systems are seeing new life.
I also second @grandpoobear.bsky.social's suggestion on hard Mario levels
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I dunno if the definition of RPG can be boiled down to that, because by that definition, Monster Hunter isn't an RPG. Genres are vague category descriptors that mean something a little different to everyone. The defining features of roguelikes no longer resemble the game Rogue at all.
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Good stuff, I look forward to the permanent challenge increase.
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Believe it or not, NetHack is still in active development to this day. It practically wrote the whole playbook (after Rogue). It's HARD. It can take years of knowledge and experience to consistently get deep runs. If you're good enough to win, a single run can take 20 hours from start to finish.