I know a contractor working on teams. It was as eyerolling as you could expect.
the_joeba
MiSTER Pi with a 19" 4:3 dell monitor and original controllers (or very high replica i.e. nintendo online nes, snes, n64, etc.). I'm fine with turbo core or similar. It's an amazing setup (especially with nfc). My 9 year old son loves playing retro games with me or alone.
I use ktor and exposed. Are you saying this module lets me do crud operations in a web admin portal?
Sounds interesting, but what does managing database models mean?
I can't speak to switch 2 performance, but the game was just mediocre to me, but performance was fine on switch 1.
Even if it did have firmware, the card is burned months ahead of shipping, and launch day firmware was finalized only days or weeks before launch. A game that comes out 6 months later might have launch day firmware, but that's likely outdated by the time of release.
That's not a complete overhaul, I'm talking about something like Fortnite from 8 years ago to now. That's no shared code left. That's not a game that came on cartridge, obviously, but Animal Crossing only got a few tweaks and some additional content. It isn't an example of what a key card represents.
The system update would come from the internet in this case as well.
The key card acts like any physical that has a complete overhaul post launch. The physical goes in, the game plays from internal storage. It contains no game data, and you have to download the full game from the server.
I went from the Ender 3 v3, to the Anycubic Kobra 3, and the difference is so wide, or makes it hard to recommend the Ender. With the Ender I could do small simple models, but anything with multiple parts were hard to dial in tolerances. The anycubic allows me to do multiple days of printing and be assured all the parts will come together. I now also get error handling so a tangle or running out of filament won't ruin the job. It even resumes after power loss. I know it's not in your budget, but the difference is very noticeable.