Apple added #DX12 support to macOS and Apple Silicon via its Game Porting Toolkit. It’s basically a 20k patch to Wine that will make it easy to play AAA Windows games on macOS without using a VM. github.com/apple/homebrew…
This video goes into more details if you don’t want to read the insane patch file augmented on top of the homebrew formula.
This is essentially Proton (Valve’s Wine thing for Linux/SteamOS and DX12) but for macOS. This is massive.
First, I need to know what the screen resolution and quality is like. I gotta see it in person, even before I drop down money for a dev device. This only works is the resolution is super crisp. I also need to know battery. Using it tethered is fine, but I need to know battery
I’m looking forward to the State of the Union for the dev stuff b/c I want a better understanding of types of apps that will be ideal here. And also of power for playback and video conferencing and Mac stuff.
Can I use it as an external display with my existing Macs? What Mac do I need for that? Can I control with mouse and keyboard too (I assume yes, just asking questions). I need to know about RAM and also how it works if it is used as an accessory what RAM I need.
Because people asked: this is why it is a scam: it is designed to benefit the company, not employee. In the US (the only place you can get away with it), the reason companies do this is so they don’t have to pay out PTO when you leave or are laid off.
PTO, when earned, has a real tangible value. Yes, they can limit how much you can roll over (state dependent), but if you leave your job and had six weeks of vacation saved, they have to pay that back to you in your final check. It’s part of your salary and you accrue it.
I’ve figured out a through-line in my career/life: my very favorite thing to do is to highlight cool people making cool shit, leveraging my/my employer’s platform/reach to do so. Legit, it’s my favorite thing. That and connecting cool people together.
This is why I created #TheDownload (latest episode ) and why I love doing streams and talks that highlight cool stuff. Call me a connector or whatever the term is, but I love sharing cool stuff from cool people, tech, art, whatever it might be.
But when I look back at my entire professional career, from USA Today onward, it has always been about sharing/celebrating/highlighting cool shit. Even as a preteen, my website had picks for my favorite apps and websites.
Any company in 2022 that doesn’t understand the insipid necessity of the counteroffer song and dance is stuck back in the 1980s or something, back when people had pensions and you worked at companies for life. That’s not how things work.
I tend to stay at jobs a long time. I’m pretty freaking loyal. I have received counters at every job Ive ever had that I was at for more than a year. I've also received normal promotions (and some out of band I didn’t ask for) after doing a counter.
Huzzah and good news for all of us old school pirates, or file sharers I guess we could say. A new Transmission beta after years and years of waiting. Also, Apple Silicon support. github.com/transmission/t…
I torrent and I will not apologize for it, nor will I pretend that I only torrent Linux distros or artist-approved bootlegs. I spend more on media than any person I’ve ever met, let me torrent in peace.
My favorite act of weird subversion when I was a journalist and even as a baby blogger was to use legit screenshots of my torrent client in any write-ups about torrent clients. Because faking it is for cops.
Warner Bros. Television has always been the best at TV, if we’re honest. That’s why gutting HBO Max and making it more like Discovery would be a mistake
Because inspire of Stankey and co trying to kill and dilute HBO, terrible name aside, HBO Max has been good! Really good! No other network or television studio has had the sort of run of WBTV or HBO. HBO is a given but people always sleep on WBTV’s lineage
But Friends, ER, the West Wing, Will & Grace, Nip/Tuck, Big Bang Theory and many, many more big Emmy winners that weren’t on HBO came from WBTV