I love the Chinese book "Unsheathed" (or Sword of Coming), it's a high fantasy (xianxia) novel with great writing. However, the English translation is not yet finished, currently around book 6 of 11 (which is about more than 4000 pages of writing). It's a story about a contryside orphan boy living in a small village starting to realize that the stories of gods, dragons, and immortals he heard about in folk tales and legends are actually all true, and that the world beyong the village is magical and fantastical in many ways.
alphabethunter
Which you can't without AI.
One way to look at it is that these women are so used to being abused, to the point that oppression is deeply ingrained in their minds as just "the way it's supposed to be". Another way to look at it is that there are people out there who truly enjoy being submissive, and who truly think that being seen as lesser is all well and good. Truth is probably somewhere in between. However, It's a really dangerous tightrope to walk about saying that a huge majority of grown adults can't make decisions for themselves because they are literally incapable of choosing the best for themselves due to cultural manipulation. It basically debunks democracy as we know it. It makes it really hard to defend democracy when you can't fully trust the ability to make informed and educated decisions of the majority of your population, so we pretend that it's a non-issue and simply don't talk about it.
I'm not even 30 yet and I ripped CDs in my youth. I didn't use limewire though, we would use torrents already at that point.
How dare you ask people on the internet to have reading, interpretation and critical thinking skills and not just read the headline and immediately jump to conclusions based on superficial evidence at best?!
You're a computer boomer, basically don't count. A lot of millennials, with no relation to tech, can use the computer at least for basic stuff. That can't be said about any other generation.
Proceeds to have a melt down for the next few moments considering how time must be a lie.
Playing Star Wars 5e, short campaign, first time DM, we did fine for the whole 3 games we played, all four players were playing fine, taking smart choices trying to make it the best experience for our friend who was dming for the first time ever. All until we got to the end of the campaign, time to confront the big baddie. I missed an investigation check to spot a trap, we take massive damage, dm tells us to roll initiative, we all roll really low (under 5), DM says we see a laser coming from a vantage position, starts rolling multi-attack, 3 straight nat 20s, massive damage rolls, 3 out of 4 members of the party died instantly, me included. The remaining member was a doctor, we felt we had a chance... DM says the big baddie has legendary actions. After around 12 hours of gaming, across three days, we all died in less than 10 minutes. Fun times, we still make fun of him whenever we remember. The worst thing? I took a look at the encounter later, it was not even that badly tuned, it was really just piss-poor luck.
Well, it is really old news from a game that launched in 2015, but the summary of it is a feature that allows enemies in the game to remember you, and evolve with the player. You killed an Orc chieftain, his right-hand orc is now the chieftain, and thanks you for clearing the way for him. Lost a battle to a miserable orc archer? Next time he sees you he jokes to your face and tells you how shit you are. It is a great system, but it was patented.
There exists no gpu that uses two of those connectors. The whole reason that connector exists is so that you can have a single connector going into any gpu. Thus, the only reason to have two, is to have two GPUs that use said connector. Right now, the main reason to sport two brand new top of the line Nvidia GPUs is AI. Is it the only reason? Not really, it can also be a professional setup for some kind of heavy workload.
"Sekiro! Hesitation is defeat."
I still believe it is the best game From Software has ever made, better than Elden Ring. I can't pick any single (real) flaw with that game. Pacing is perfect, combat is perfect, story is great, visuals are incredible. Yes, terror buildup is so god damm annoying, but it functions as a challenge mechanic in the game to do only optional things. If I had to give it numbers, I'd say that Sekiro is a true 10/10 game, whereas Elden Ring I'd give it a 9.5/10 (has it's flaws, my biggest gripe with it is that I don't quite agrre that this huge giant world is mostly all dead and lifeless, I fell like ER could benefit a lot from a Majula of sorts, and also the crafting part seems kind of out of place and not up to their standard of quality).