Watching a Killer Instinct documentary and the early internal decision to make the arcade machine louder the higher your combos went in order to draw a crowd is some brilliant carnie attract mode shit.— Minovsky (@MinovskyArticle) July 7, 2020
This is the Killer Instinct documentary for those looking for a link. https://t.co/j7Oe38if1Y— Minovsky (@MinovskyArticle) July 7, 2020
AC fishing dad is the most wholesome thing on this planet pic.twitter.com/uMVFxYUn6S— Louise! (@themouseyouknow) July 1, 2020
Tencent’s hot sauce fraud exposes expired tech, says @petesweeneypro: https://t.co/5zKhf9djYh. pic.twitter.com/KfqD19jzqN— ReutersBreakingviews (@Breakingviews) July 3, 2020
The Void at Downtown Disney District Permanently Shut Down Due to License Agreement Breach; Disney Springs Location Potentially Affectedhttps://t.co/8U6jMxzLQS pic.twitter.com/ayIDkcECoz— WDW News Today (@WDWNT) July 3, 2020
So the Void VR was allegedly served a cease and desist for their star wars experience and an eviction notice, and all I'm thinking is how the VR venture was entirely in service of funding the creator's passion project medieval theme park which I didn't get to go to yet— Jenny Nicholson (@JennyENicholson) July 3, 2020
...Whatever. pic.twitter.com/1S5VRavffN— Kheici (@kheici) July 4, 2020
I spent a couple years bouncing between contract gigs. Whenever I was out of work, I would play a lot Destiny but felt bad that I wasn’t writing. So, to keep working on my skills, I started writing short stories set in the fantastic sci-fi universe they had created. 1/2— Clay Murphy (@yourpalclay) July 7, 2020
Fifteen years ago there were about 5,000 companies in the UK that were sure that the ringtone subscription gravy train was going to keep on going forever, which is always a comforting thing to remember when you look at esports— Robin Clarke (@rclarke) July 2, 2020
Being a millennial means the PlayStation 3 is still the most powerful computer ever created, whose hexagonal CPU was forged with fire and icemelt by master siliconsmiths in bowels of Mount Takao. Luckily, Saddam Hussein was stopped before he could build a Beowulf cluster of them.— Swift⬡nSecurity (@SwiftOnSecurity) July 3, 2020
I once used the cluster of 215 PlayStation 3s at EPFL, that was a lot of cheap computing power at the time. And unlike for other CPUs, assembly programming for SPUs was quite magical: exact clockcycle predictions just from code. pic.twitter.com/d5h2JakZbE— Marc Stevens (@realhashbreaker) July 3, 2020