

Exactly! Rust has so many deep mechanics that aren’t PvP. I have over 3k hours myself, and I’d bet 1/3 of that is with a wire tool in my hand making logic circuits.


Exactly! Rust has so many deep mechanics that aren’t PvP. I have over 3k hours myself, and I’d bet 1/3 of that is with a wire tool in my hand making logic circuits.


At least in the US, companies have a legal fiduciary duty to protect their investors interests above all else.


Good for who?


I understand this is an impressive amount to tow, and to haul, but how tf does it stop? That’s a lot of weight and not a lot of brake.


See, now that’s just the TV stand for the newer TV on top!
But seriously, why the fake drawers in these? The drawer handles even rotated, but you’d just be pulling against the wood.


Apologies, I misread the tone of your comment. I thought you were jokingly saying dial up was fancy while you had to deal with AOL. I didn’t read it as two different statements as I should have.


AOL was dial-up.
Google also appended a 90 day disclosure policy to their reports. FFmpeg can always say , we’re not going to fix that, but that would mean a security issue would be published, and letting nefarious actors act on it. Even if it would only affect 3 users, the idea that the follow up information of, “don’t use FFmpeg for this use case or you’ll be hacked,” would be out there.
The criticism arrises from the fact Google, the multinational mega-corp, is sending these reports with the 90 day disclosure policy to a tiny unpaid team. How about the company with something like $100,000,000,000/year in net income offer a patch or two?