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Integrated Intel GPU's have come a long way since Windows Vista. They started to be usable around 2012 and actually decent in the current decade


Wasn't 2022 a huge outlier because of the war in Ukraine?


Yes


I opened the website in his profile and joined the discord.

Yes there's a discord for this.


welcome to the team. reboot-to-play is the future.


> Neither smartphones nor Macs have been powerful or ergonomic enough to play current-generation games for decades. So the user base is almost entirely people who don’t play games.

Current Macs and iOS devices are powerful enough. There's a handful of developers shipping full current-gen games to both platforms.


To add: I found the M4 iPad Pro keyboard to be a better typing experience than my MacBook Pro keyboard or the standalone Magic Keyboard


News flash - most doctors all over the world are doing it for money and status. It's a job.


Try Vivaldi, it has something like that


Yep, can tile as many sites as you want inside one tab.


They arent taking that away. No one is going to force you to sideload because most people won't sideload. Only a few Android apps aren't on the play store even though sideloading is very easy.


And they tend to be ones that Google isn't happy with, like ad-free YouTube clients.


Thankfully, Apple doesn't own YouTube.

What they don't like is porn and gambling.


and apps that have their own Stripe account and/or want to tell customers that they can save 30% by paying through the website, or pay 30% more to use the Apple subscription/payments system. But user education and market competition would mean Apple's 30% is way, way too much, so hardly anybody would actually do that if they had the choice...


They love gambling, it just has to be wrapped in virtual lootboxes.


Most programmers are anything but outsiders. It's not a niche profession anymore


Being a programmer necessarily changes how you approach and interact with computers.

After a while (and not a long one) you develop a serious usability bias since you can intuit what a program is doing and how best to interact with it.

The longer you work in software, the harder it is to accurately imagine how a non programmer uses a computer.

That’s why the classic “only users could cause this error” jokes exist.


The way i see it, that's just a huge advantage.

My partner works as a medical research assistant. They had filled data into a huge spreadsheet in a software I think was called IBM SSES or something along those lines. Basically an excel spreadsheet, with hundreds of columns and tens of thousands of rows.

One of the analyses they wanted to run wasn't working correctly so she was tasked with filling in 0s in place of empty cells. She was expecting to spend 2-3 weeks doing this. She mentioned it to me, I've never seen this software before in my life but it took me 15 minutes to figure out how to do three weeks of manual work instantly. Just googled it and followed some instructions.

Being able to understand software is a useful skill. We should find ways to bring the average person up to speed, help them understand what computers can do so they too can see a task like that and be like "there's no way the software doesn't have an easier way to do that" instead of wasting time doing pointless busywork.


It’s a useful skill when using a machine, but not when anticipating how people out in non-tech land will use that same machine.


You say that as if there is another solution.

This is one way that you can design your software - follow existing conventions so that people's existing knowledge is useful for understanding your software.

The alternative can be summarized as "not doing that" and personally I don't see that solving any problems. It just means people have to learn it from scratch instead. And it's not like anyone actually reads manuals and such.


Nintendo, for example, regularly hires game designers with no game design experience.

Famously, there was a shoe designer who was hired on the BOTW team. The fresh perspective keeps Nintendo games from falling into idiosyncrasies, which is part of the reason children and adults can just walk up and play most Nintendo games and have immediate without needing prior gaming experience.

I think it’s valuable to have non technical designers and QAs for that reason.

Sure the fresh perspective fades after a while, but it’s still valuable AND gives us in tech a reason to hire those not in tech.


It's just renting space in a big server room. Every mid-to-large city has companies providing that kind of service


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