The reason those games are so popular is that they’re inherently exploitative. I have no issues with predatory app developers being priced out of business.
The reason those games are so popular is that they’re inherently exploitative. I have no issues with predatory app developers being priced out of business.
Correct.
It’s hard to care about people who develop games to encourage and monetize on gambling addictions.
That’s the point that’s being made.
People actually read the article?
[I’m the dumbass who didn’t read the article]
Good riddance. Less bullshit to uninstall when I get a new phone.
That might be the best option I have until I finish my Hal9000 project.
That… Isn’t the worst idea. My HA server is close to all of them, so I would just have to add a RF blaster.
And I thought about the momentary switch, but it would be a PITA to wire it so that the wires were hidden.
I don’t want to have to run wires since our attic is a nightmare (blown in insulation 3ft deep), and I don’t want wires just running in the open.
What I’m looking for really isn’t super complicated. It could easily be done by Lutron or someone making a few small changes to a motion light since they already have the firmware to select shutoff times.
S1 and S2 are only for the activation switch. You connect the actual device that gets controlled to Line Out.
If your setup doesn’t require a physical switch, then nothing gets connected to S1 and S2
I don’t know anything about your device, but would a factory reset be too much of a hassle?
A few months ago I was tasked with translating a script from one IBM emulator program to another because the owners of the first program wouldn’t respond to requests to purchase a new license.
The scripting language used on both was unique to the software, and the documentation was basically non-existent. Plus, the script was written over a decade ago, and the guy who wrote it was long gone.
For weeks I banged my head against the wall trying to figure out the logic flow before I realized that it was essentially BASIC, which I haven’t touched in over 20 years.
You’re just trying to get the device into a known good state.
The truth is that it’s rarely worth trying to find the root cause of an issue unless it’s a frequent problem.
Something somewhere went wrong. We don’t know if it’s a hardware or software issue, so we’ll try a solution that covers both.
Powering the device off stops the flow of electricity, and waiting a few seconds makes sure that any capacitors (think of very tiny, very fast batteries) bleed off the power they’ve stored. Then turning it back on makes it go through the full startup process which is likely to result in a working state.
Or we could all just move to nano and be less frustrated.
And like the other 10 companies that own pretty much every brand in the country.
I knew I was over thinking things, and the solution would be a super simple product. Thank you!