Foone is worried this comes off as domain squatting. The prices are "how much is my fee for how much of a pain it is for me to extricate myself from domains I've had for 25 years." I'm not squatting
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I can seriously get behind a timeline where Biden goes as crazy on the nation around trains as Trump did with his wall.
Everyone works on the trains, like right now everyone has people in their family who went to war. Just, everybody working some train time - part of the crew that built this pass, or who helped with the beautification of their local station, or collected beautiful Train Bonds
And people screaming "Why the trains when ____________" or "Trains? Who needs more Trains! We need more _________"
Just a thing. Joe did his job OK, but ohhh man, the Biden Train Renaissance touches everyone's lives as a memory in 2040
@RochBalrog Because people die, John. Because the locations of playing files and the instructions on how to play them and get them working often get lost.
@RochBalrog Because you're using Google Drive links to provide your files. The links are obscure, Google keeps changing the services and it's almost guaranteed these links won't work in the future. (Mega, Photobucket, and many more have shifted functionality or cut it off completely.)
@RochBalrog Because not everybody is a strong enthusiast who knows how to find lists of games, and then go to each site, and then find in those sites their particular approach to offering what they have, and which version. Your site is a blog-format with google drive links threaded in.
This uploader at Youtube is putting up a lot of one of a kind video. When (not if) Youtube's content-id mangler starts yanking it down, I'll be waiting to help mirror it at Internet Archive.
I get why people use youtube to save archival video. I also totally understand if they're hosting a video channel they derive income from, and want to have the tools to do so. They definitely have those tools.
In 1985, Mary Ann Buckles released her dissertation, "Interactive Fiction: The Computer Storygame Adventure", receiving her Ph.D. from UCSD. She fought for it the whole way, saying it was really important, that these games would change our relationship to computers.
Her dissertation board had members dead set against this frivolous subject. The experience left her exhausted, and she wrote one more article about adventure games before becoming a massage therapist. Many, many game dissertations now quote her work, a major pioneering effort.