belshamharoth

joined 1 year ago
[–] belshamharoth 4 points 1 year ago (7 children)

https://www.eurasiantimes.com/a-whopping-900b-debt-chinas-once-profitable-high-speed-railways/?amp

It'd be good to have high speed rail but not at any cost.

Queue tankies going crazy to defend the absurd cost...

9
What are they doing? (self.runescape)
submitted 1 year ago by belshamharoth to c/runescape
 

Why would mid-late game players buy low level items on the Grand Exchange?

I'm new to Runescape and so confused as to why players would buy low level items such as wood, ore or bronze armour from the Grand Exchange, are they just hoarders who have a compulsion to collect everything?

[–] belshamharoth 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I question whether this is real, is there a link to the source article to try and verify it?


edit:

Found link to archived article: https://archive.is/bAvVt

[–] belshamharoth 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Why didn't they simply make the car cheaper without software locking features?

Seems like a bit of a lousy move on the part of Tesla

[–] belshamharoth 24 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Good review by Mortismal Gaming:

https://youtube.com/watch?v=8h64EYMoLF8&feature=share9

This guy specialises in reviewing CRPGs and his reviews are really good. Often he reviews games after 100% completing them

353
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by belshamharoth to c/games
 

Recently I've discovered the joy of CRPGs, having previously only dabbled in them without spending any significant time on the genre.

With Baldur's Gate 2 just around the corner, which I'm sure many of us are hyped for, I wanted to try a similar CRPG to get a feel for whether I'm going to want to play it. Enter DOS2; this game is made by Larian Studios, the same studio making BG2, and is an absolutely incredible game.

From the graphics, which are stunning even 6 years on from release, to the combat which makes you think about your moves in a manner similar to how you might do in a game like chess, and best of all stories which are for the most part genuinely interesting. I frequently found myself surprised at events / characters / quests I found throughout the world, even small things like hearing someone screaming nearby then discovering they had been torn to pieces by voidwoken.

I recently just finished Act I and just started Act II but wanted to share a bit of love for this game as it is an absolute masterpiece with a well deserved 95% positive rating with 144k reviews on steam.

gameplay

Please share your experience with DOS2 and whether or not you have fully completed the game!

[–] belshamharoth 8 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I'm very excited as I've only recently discovered how fun CRPGs are. In preparation I've started playing through Divinity Original Sins II and am up to Act 2 so far.

The scene from the Livestream with the vampire and druid bear was so out there I can't wait to see what other crazy/interesting things are in the final game.

[–] belshamharoth 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I've only completed Act I and can't believe Act II will be even bigger, there's already so much to do in Act I. Are there only two acts in total? After DOS2 I plan on playing through Pathfinder Wrath of the Righteous and then maybe Pillars of Eternity 2

[–] belshamharoth 1 points 1 year ago

Did you help Slane the dragon?

[–] belshamharoth 2 points 1 year ago

Also that, according to the WHO, processed meat is carcinogenic and red meat is probably carginogenic so people are giving themselves cancer by eating it.

Source:

https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/cancer-carcinogenicity-of-the-consumption-of-red-meat-and-processed-meat

[–] belshamharoth 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Why a cure for ageing would benefit everyone and not solely the ultra wealthy

If you put aside ethical and humanitarian reasons for making a cure for ageing widely available, there is still economic considerations, i.e. if you are a government you will be presented with a choice between:

Do I pay to treat people for ageing, even though the treatment might initially be expensive, or do I let them age without intervention?

The former option might actually be significantly cheaper because people in an advanced state of ageing cost more money. They have more diseases, since many diseases are age related such as dementia, cancer and cardiac disease, and need more healthcare and also can't work anymore.

If instead, the government pays for rejuvenation treatment they save on all the other healthcare costs and their people don't have to stop being productive.

So perhaps in the future when a cure for ageing is actually developed it will be made available for everyone rich and poor alike

[–] belshamharoth 1 points 1 year ago

"Thus, rejuvenation by age reversal can be achieved, not only by genetic, but also chemical means."

https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.204896

-- Journal of Aging

[–] belshamharoth 4 points 1 year ago

Full journal article here

https://www.aging-us.com/article/204896/text

"Thus, rejuvenation by age reversal can be achieved, not only by genetic, but also chemical means."

-- Journal article abstract

[–] belshamharoth 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

The full journal article says "in vivo" not "in vitro". They have already successfully regenerated mice which are organisms biologically similar to humans.


Edit

I was wrong about this. The journal article does only talk about results obtained "in vitro" but mentions other studies that have successfully reversed cellular ageing "in vivo".

The ability of the Yamanaka factors to erase cellular identity raised a key question: is it possible to reverse cellular aging in vivo without causing uncontrolled cell growth and tumorigenesis? Initially, it didn’t seem so, as mice died within two days of expressing OSKM. But work by the Belmonte lab, our lab, and others have confirmed that it is possible to safely improve the function of tissues in vivo by pulsing OSKM expression [22, 23] or by continuously expressing only OSK, leaving out the oncogene c-MYC

So in this study the results were only in vitro but other studies have successfully reversed cellular ageing in vivo.

308
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by belshamharoth to c/games
 

Saw a game on Google Play that had great reviews (4.6k AVG with 77k reviews) so downloaded it thinking I finally might have found a good mobile game only to find it was trash like almost every mobile game I've ever tried.

Is it me, am I the problem, or are virtually all mobile games terrible?


Edit

Thanks for everyone's feedback and suggestions, I've been trying out some of your recommendations as well as trying out Steam Link to play my steam PC games

142
Loving this game: Against the Storm (store.steampowered.com)
submitted 1 year ago by belshamharoth to c/games
 

Just wanted to bring some more well deserved attention to this awesome game!

After playing too many city builder games I thought it'd be a long time before I got into another but after seeing the crazy high rating on steam (95% positive with more than 11k reviews) I decided to try it out and boy is it awesome.

I've been hooked playing this game for the last couple weeks now, I'd love to hear Lemmy's thoughts on the game

Official description:

A dark fantasy city builder where you must rebuild civilization in the face of apocalyptic rains. As the Queen’s Viceroy, lead humans, beavers, lizards, foxes, and harpies to reclaim the wilderness and secure a future for civilization's last survivors.

Against the Storm

 

TL;DR; tried gaming on Linux again after not having done so for ~10 years and am absolutely blown away by how much improved it is

Today I decided to get some use out of an older/leftover PC that I had laying around after upgrading. My plan was to plug it into the TV in our lounge room so that my 5 year old can play some of the less demanding games she enjoys from my steam library (stuff like Slime Rancher 2).

Originally my plan was to install Windows on it only to discover I couldn't do this due to TPM / secureboot requirements that the older hardware couldn't handle, this was infuriating and felt like I couldn't use my own machine which used to run Windows fine.

To understand where I'm coming from; I've been a Linux user on and off for more than a decade and in the past had been able to play some games using Wine but it was often fiddly or simply wouldn't run the game well enough which is why I generally just dual boot Windows for gaming.

I decided to give Linux a try as I'd heard steam has made gaming on Linux much more approachable than it once was using a proton compatibility layer (which under the hood uses Wine but making it a bit easier to use).

After installing Ubuntu 23, Steam and then enabling the proton compatibility in Steam settings I am absolutely amazed at how easy it was to get most games working!. My daughter has been playing Slime Rancher 2 and it works really well and I've also tested a few other games such as Cult of the Lamb and Dredge and they also worked well. This is such a leap forward to how I remember the state of things back ~10 years ago when I last played games on Linux.

From recent developments it seems like gaming on Linux is really beginning to pick up momentum and I look forward to the day game publishers place great import on releasing native Linux ports but until then am super grateful for the work the good people at Wine have been doing as well as Proton and Steam for making it easier to use.

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