This would be a good headline on any outlet other than PCGamer, who have added an "AI" "News" section to paste press releases about "AI" into that are completely unrelated to PC gaming. www.pcgamer.com/uk/software/...
This would be a good headline on any outlet other than PCGamer, who have added an "AI" "News" section to paste press releases about "AI" into that are completely unrelated to PC gaming. www.pcgamer.com/uk/software/...
Weird, I vividly recall Tim Sweeney claiming that metaverse is the next big thing a few years ago, and that his children's casino was among the frontrunners.
November 27, 2025 at 12:58 PM
Weird, I vividly recall Tim Sweeney claiming that metaverse is the next big thing a few years ago, and that his children's casino was among the frontrunners.
if anyone here has ever looked at the logs of any complex piece of software, saw all the errors, and thought "how is this even working", it's usually stuff like this.
November 24, 2025 at 9:27 AM
if anyone here has ever looked at the logs of any complex piece of software, saw all the errors, and thought "how is this even working", it's usually stuff like this.
Yeah I'm almost sympathetic to the name-switcheroo, since it's an attempt at redirecting money being wasted on a bubble into real things.
Companies locking existing features behind an AI opt-in are clearly just trying to pad some numbers and play games with user consent, which is straight up ass.
November 21, 2025 at 6:22 PM
Yeah I'm almost sympathetic to the name-switcheroo, since it's an attempt at redirecting money being wasted on a bubble into real things.
Companies locking existing features behind an AI opt-in are clearly just trying to pad some numbers and play games with user consent, which is straight up ass.
From what I've heard from friends and family, yeah pretty much. Usually it's companies who ran AD and other Microsoft stuff on-premises previously and then migrated "to the cloud" by having that as a service from Azure.
October 29, 2025 at 5:22 PM
From what I've heard from friends and family, yeah pretty much. Usually it's companies who ran AD and other Microsoft stuff on-premises previously and then migrated "to the cloud" by having that as a service from Azure.