Swap the monkey out with a werewolf (or 14), and I’ll call him by whatever name he wants. UwU
Swap the monkey out with a werewolf (or 14), and I’ll call him by whatever name he wants. UwU
Ehh, I’d say he was more boringly safe, especially for a lot of his in-country policy stuff.
And that’s a good thing. The presidency is not meant to be glorious, exciting, or full of media magnet bombshells. Those generally mean that something has gone wrong.
According to the article, Twitter is also charging $42,000 minimum for enterprise access. That’s over $500k per year. If I was a Nintendo employee, I would not only cut that expense, but also use it as leverage for a massive end of year bonus.
I doubt that for two reasons:
There’s no non-admin way for an app to discern if it’s a firewall block, or a legitimate no-internet situation (i.e. didn’t purchase in-flight WiFi). It would also look really bad PR-wise if a company banned customers just because their internet went down or was otherwise spotty.
How would they even know? Their software can’t tattle on me if it’s been blocked from establishing a connection.
Thankfully I don’t do anything that requires me to have Photoshop, but if I did, I’d be explicitly blocking all outbound connections in the firewall.
Facebook spends billions on a fake walled garden “metaverse”, and has nothing to show for it.
Meanwhile, Frooxius and his team developed Resonite (and its predecessor Neos), and both of them are far closer to being actual metaverse implementations, simply due to them being able to speak HTTP/Websocket/OSC to external user applications.