Since the graphics card in a PC can set you back the cost of a console,
But was that not always the case? In todays money I would have paid 570 bucks when I hooked up "surround gaming" in 2002 with three monitors via a PCI matrox parhelia triple head. Gaming was not my main thing, but sequencing music which was a dream ocme true spread across three screens. Never can have enough screen estate for music.And then some... I'd love an RTX2080ti but that's almost the cost of new PC all by itself![]()
I'm not sure if you understand correctly.Thanks a lot Ashnak and others. ( Typing on my MacBook Pro 17-inch, Early 2008)
All right, that lifted the fog a wee bit better now. I was not aware that PC gamers usually dish out additional bucks for multiplayer.
Stay safe there in S-Germany, some very heavy rain, severe flooding down the pipe.
Stay safe there in S-Germany, some very heavy rain, severe flooding down the pipe.
I'm not sure if you understand correctly.
A PC have a cost, yes, but typically you don't pay anything extra to get multiplayer. If you're paying for an internet connection, you have access to multiplayer (in games supporting multiplayer).
My understanding is that for CONSOLES (please correct me if I'm wrong) you can be connected to the internet and play games, but to play multiplayer you need to pay an additional subscription, even though you're already paying your internet provider for internet. With a console you are also paying the console company specifically to play multiplayer.
A normal mmo doesn't have a single player gameplay option, so I wouldn't really call elite an mmo. Especially considering the few people you encounter even in open. It's an RPG for sure, but my understanding is that the "massive" in mmo refer to lots of people.Thanks, but I live pretty much on top of a local hill. I'm more concerned about the wind (but fortunately, most of the village is serving as my windbreak).
Don't most of the MMOs run on a subscription basis? Or is this simply my distorted perception, as I don't play them and only read the wrong press articles?
Maybe Triton is Raxxla, they have the same number of letters and we can’t get to either one coincidence?Decited to pootle around near the birth of human kind (allegedly) on Europa. Got me to wondering - and here's my wondering face:
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... where are all the moons? When I look at the system map for Sol, there are a few, for example, for Jupiter and Saturn, but these gassy chaps have a lot moe than that:
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Moons of Jupiter - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
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Moons of Saturn - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Obviously, they couldn't all be in there but I would have thought more could have been. I wonder why not? And I wonder if there was a restriction of some kind? And why we're at it, I want to land on Triton. That red circle around it is annoying. Perhaps the clues to Raxxla lie on that planets' surface.
One does not "build" a ship unless they are playing Space Engineers (or one of the clones)Out here in Colonia, I've started building an exploration Conda, called "Nellie Bly" (look her up):
Assemble might suit? Although you buy an initially functional (arguable..) ship, where you just use the hull and add appropriate modules for the specific role. You don't need to know how something goes where, just decide what to put where.One does not "build" a ship unless they are playing Space Engineers (or one of the clones)![]()
Well, I've changed everything but the hull, including the gas tankOne does not "build" a ship unless they are playing Space Engineers (or one of the clones)![]()
Try and do the math. It's not very difficult. You have an exponential growth of the bits flipped and transferred globally. It takes a certain minimum amount of energy to flip a bit, called the Landauer Limit. We are not even close to the Limit today, and use far more energy per bit, but because technology becomes more and more energy efficient, the amount of energy needed for flipping a bit drops exponentially as well. It's basically Moore's law, struggling against itself.All that Info about console, PC, servers, gaming got me thinking.
I consider my freezer to be an essential in our day to day life, ymmv, mainly because I cook everything fresh und buy meat from the producer twice a year. Hence, I got one of the most efficient freezers on the market back in 2017, and while at an expense, even with 72 hours of power outage, the food will be frozen and safe, and power usage is on the very low side.
One research pointed out that in the US gaming energy consumption outranks the energy consumption of all freezerscombined.
Then there is this:
Global Internet Traffic
1992- 100 GB per day
1997- 100 GB per hour
2002- 100 GB per second
2007- 2000 GB per second
2017- 46,600 GB per second
2022- 150,700 GB per second
source: https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solut...working-index-vni/white-paper-c11-741490.html
just thinking out loud....
the Landauer Limit.
“The greatest shortcoming of the human race is our inability to understand the exponential function.”
― Albert A. Bartlett
You're taking the red pills. That's a mistake I can warn against doing. Take the blue pills instead, and if you chose the red pills, don't eat all of them at once. That's what I did. Emptied the whole glass of red pills down the throat. Now, I mostly meet people telling me that what I say is probably true, but it's too depressing to contemplate, "...so shut the beep up". You'll be much more happy staying ignorant, for as long as it lastsYes!
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Landauer Limit Demonstrated
Scientists show that a 50-year-old principle limiting future CMOS computing is real: Erasing information gives off heatspectrum.ieee.org
Yessss!
Even more so: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnsys.2016.00090/full