That's surprising. It has supported Vulkan for a long time. Then again, I may not fully understand how your setup works.
I don't know this to be a fact, but we own a Kia targeted by this whole 'challenge' business, and my understanding is that this issue is primarily because remote start was a factory installed feature for most of the generation and the "software update" that enhances security prevents remote starters from working.
Commercial wide format print shop owner
What happened? Regulatory capture happened.
That's certainly an opinion. Mine is that participating in leeching their freebies and not actually engaging in the platform in a meaningful way costs them money with zero benefit. They're giving away games to get people into their ecosystem. If players aren't participating in the ecosystem, then it's not working and just costing money. This is techbro 101.
You're entitled to your opinion. But you're not changing my mind on this.
And you're out here defending them. 🤷🏼♂️
Epic is subsidizing the sale of the games. It costs them money and muddies their metrics.
Correct. Fuck Epic. They're awful.
Full transparency though, I've played precisely one game on epic games store, Alan Wake 2 because I like Remedy as a developer and want to support them. Alan Wake 2 will never come out on any other platform and I'm not buying a console to play one game.
Step 1: Redeem games through my web browser.
That's it, there is no step 2.
Renting can be cheaper, too; a tenant isn't on the hook for repairs to a unit, but when I need a new roof in my house, or the water heater goes out, I get to pay every penny of that myself. Yeah, the mortgage is cheaper, but just because you can afford the mortgage doesn't mean that you can afford everything else that goes into owning a home.
Don't worry about that, landlords have figured that out. There's a new 500 unit apartment complex that is currently being built in the Philadelphia suburbs that is taking applicants for units at the affordable price of $3500 per month.
I want to do the math here, but I'm already late to the party. Amazon sells sex toys as health and beauty products. It's a thin vaneer of plausible deniability. I'd be curious if Amazon is actually large enough financially to actually leverage the large processors. I would be honestly surprised if Amazon is handling a large enough stake by themselves to offset literally every other vendor on the planet combined. But they might. I don't actually know.