
I can’t even imagine somebody having a rebuttal to that.
Pioneer of the brave new frontier.
I can’t even imagine somebody having a rebuttal to that.
How long do you think before he just vanishes?
Thank you for doing what you can to make sure those “forgotten people” are remembered and mourned.
Zero… point… zero.
The N64 was the only Nintendo console I skipped. I just couldn’t afford two consoles and the PlayStation was obviously a better choice, but I still kinda wish I had gotten to experience Ocarina and Majora’s Mask when they were brand new and not years later on the GameCube. I played at my friend’s houses, but just hated that controller. The Wavebird made it a bit more palatable, but it was still just too “avante garde” for its own good. Feels like I needed yo shove a mop handle in the expansion port and use it as a trident.
“Wrote a wrapper”. Oh, is that all? It’s just that easy, huh?
Then why can none of these FOSS apps deliver the same experience, if Dawson is such an untalented hack?
You either have no clue of what you’re talking about, or you’re a troll. From my perspective, there is no substantive difference. If it’s such an easy shtick, the do it yourself, and do a better job. Put up, or shut up. Nobody asked for your respect, and I’m certain you know precisely where you can shove it.
It’s amazing how divorced from reality the FOSS obsessed can be whenever anyone mentions non-FOSS apps. Nobody is bending over backwards, and nobody is sucking anyone’s schlong. If Sync were to have been FOSS, you’d be first in line to sing its praises. This trollish behavior doesn’t win anyone over to the “All Software Must Be Foss” camp at all. Must be a PC Master Race thing.
It’s not the communication that is being critiqued, it’s the unsual leap of contextual logic made to connect Twitter to Emacs. The Enties don’t follow it, because they can’t see how the unusual comparison paired with a strong recommendation for Emacs could be anything other than an “ad”, and not just an enthusiastic personal endorsement for a thing you’re passionate about.
Edit: I never knew Emacs had a built-in IRC client! What a rad bit of software.
A badee a ba di