• @vracker@reddthat.com
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    221 year ago

    Didn’t read the article.

    The idea of online only software irritates me. Of course multiplayer games have to work this way. When blizzard and Ubisoft started requiring an active connection for single player games that was just going too far.

    Can you imagine sitting at your computer, doing literally anything. The screen goes strait to blue with the windows shutting down screen saying, “Internet disrupted, please contact your provider for support”.

    • Venutian Spring
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      111 year ago

      Or trying to do any work on the go? This whole idea is just idiotic to me.

    • @floofloof@lemmy.caOP
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      31 year ago

      They will have to continue to offer some kind of offline option it seems, for people with flaky internet connections.

      • @towerful@beehaw.org
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        91 year ago

        Never mind flaky internet, what about people that do events?

        Things like PowerPoint presentation machines, VJ systems, video servers (for massive multiscreen playback).
        You can’t go into a field for a festival and expect reliable internet.
        You can’t go into a theatre and expect reliable internet, especially when 3k+ people turn up.
        There are a few systems that run OSX, but Apple’s hardware doesn’t give you as much control as something like an Nvidia Quadro with sync cards. 99% of the big shows will be ran from Windows OS

        • @i_am_not_a_robot@discuss.tchncs.de
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          11 year ago

          Apple can barely figure out how to get a picture out of their own hardware. Monitor support is surprisingly an afterthought in a graphical operating system often used by artists. I shouldn’t need to download scripts from GitHub to change my RGB monitor to run in RGB mode. With such an expensive computer, I should be able to connect multiple monitors at the same time like I can on much cheaper computers.

        • @i_am_not_a_robot@discuss.tchncs.de
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          11 year ago

          ChromeOS is just a regular OS. Without internet, everything continues to work that was designed to work. It’s about the same as Windows that way.

          However, Chromebooks have planned obsolescence, and most devices lose official OS updates after some number of years, with many having weird hardware that makes it difficult to move to another operating system.