Than replacement words shouldn’t be acceptable either, you can either express your frustration or you can’t. A choose of word shouldn’t make a difference, it should be unprofessional to make an outburst at all if that’s the case.
Than replacement words shouldn’t be acceptable either, you can either express your frustration or you can’t. A choose of word shouldn’t make a difference, it should be unprofessional to make an outburst at all if that’s the case.
Give or take, the flowering stretch is no joke.
Made an album for you, has about weekly pictures with time stamps so you can see how they go.
I run 30 seconds on and 5 minutes off 24/7.
I mix my res once a week and I usually need to add some tap water mid week. I mix my nutrients at about 80% strength as well.
I’ve just tied it up, never vac sealed it.
Right before hitting begin the keyword. If you can stop before hitting yes that’s ideal, but in situations where it jumps out and you can’t react. Braking during impact is the worst thing you can do.
If you think I’m saying to line it up and accelerate for 200meters, I dont know what to say about that,
Conditions matter and your reaction should always be for the worst possible scenario (moose and snow), braking removes your ability to maneuver as well, and locking the brakes up which will almost always happen when you panic break, would be the worst scenario. If there’s snow or rain, braking again is right out.
If it jumps out and you can’t do anything but brake, you shouldn’t do that, you grip the wheel and maintain speed, and if you can punch the gas for the hood raise. But people panic and can’t think. So maintain speed, don’t panic and lock your brakes up.
Same for a moose? Speed up so you clear it before gravity caves your car roof.
You maintain speed, you can’t maneuver well if braking, and as stated your hood dips while braking too which can cause worse issues.
Braking dips the hood making it easier for the deer to go into the windshield. You should actually speed up right before hitting to make your hood go up and make it hopefully go under or better stay in the grill.
Have you tried using a turkey bag? It won’t stop the smell completely, but filling a turkey bag has made a significant difference in the past for me. It also lets you easily shake it around to “stir” it too.
Haha no, I use the connoisseur bowls, I dropped that one pretty fast and broke it. Cleaning them isn’t tough or anything, but my grip can fumble.
I’ve got carpal tunnel and I’ve paid for enough pieces of glass, partly why I’m doing the carts -.-
I have an airizer xq2 for dry herb vapeing at home, and it’s my usual go to unless I just want to chill in bed or by the computer without having to get up.
But the carts are for when I’m out and about, I also got a “oil” vape pen as well.
So, for discreetness and for portability, and no offense taken, people need to chat in this community more haha.
As the article specifies, the save was to help with an issue, it wasn’t “personal assistance” it just helped the person as well.
The good news is that Griffiths managed to save the player’s, uh, save. In a further update, he posts a video of the game running flicker-free in the same area on the same save. Per Griffiths, the problem was a “general engine bug/limit being reached,” which means that his fix will “probably help other large bases that had this issue on Xbox.”
Read. The. Damn. Article. Instead oof a single tweet taken out of context.
The devs posting to social media is for clout and viral marketing. Why else would they post about it their own bug fix…?
The good news is that Griffiths managed to save the player’s, uh, save. In a further update, he posts a video of the game running flicker-free in the same area on the same save. Per Griffiths, the problem was a “general engine bug/limit being reached,” which means that his fix will “probably help other large bases that had this issue on Xbox.”
So where is the save being sent back for an engine issue….? This specific fix had nothing to do with fixing a specific save issue, they got sent a save that HAD the issue, and used that to fix a generic issue. Why is everyone going on about this being a save fix?
I read what you said, and you still haven’t read the article with the argument you keep going on about.
The good news is that Griffiths managed to save the player’s, uh, save. In a further update, he posts a video of the game running flicker-free in the same area on the same save. Per Griffiths, the problem was a “general engine bug/limit being reached,” which means that his fix will “probably help other large bases that had this issue on Xbox.”
So how is this anything about using personal assistance with a save…? They used the save to fix a generic bug, which is what I was originally talking about until you derailed the topic with your bullshit.
So again, did you ever. Read the bloody article…? Because nothing you’ve talked about is related to it…
The dev who the article was about…? Who else would “they” be in this context?
So they posted to social media for clout? That’s an even worse take.
And no it was a specific dev… did you even read the article?
. As No Man’s Sky engine programmer Martin Griffiths details over on X
Actually in this specific case it wasn’t even that…
The good news is that Griffiths managed to save the player’s, uh, save. In a further update, he posts a video of the game running flicker-free in the same area on the same save. Per Griffiths, the problem was a “general engine bug/limit being reached,” which means that his fix will “probably help other large bases that had this issue on Xbox.”
The save helped with it, exactly like I’ve been saying this whole time.
No, but they tweeted what they did, it didn’t have to made public by the dev, but they obviously did it for the viral marketing, and then an article picks it up and here we are. Someone is being accused of saying an article is commissioned lmfao.
If every dev that did this tweeted about it, yeah you would hear about it more, but most devs have better things to do than get some stupid marketing for things almost every dev already does.
So I ask you, why else would someone tweet about a mundane thing like fixing a bug?
A lot do, they just don’t make a marketing gimic out of it.
Do you think every little developer is gonna get a spot light for what they do? For every story you hear there’s thousands already doing it and more, but they aren’t popular so they don’t get a little shoutout, other than in their communities.
Go explore some Steam discussions and see the devs in there asking for saves, I don’t know what else to say here, but this isn’t news. Almost any dev will care if you send them a save and a specific issue.
Most games get you to upload your save with a bug report, so that’s entirely not correct.
Any outburst would be unprofessional, a specific word changes nothing unless directed at someone.