Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | starburst's commentslogin

That says more about you than about the game.


Blow has actually talked about those puzzles in streams, said he regrets it because more players than not stopped playing the games at that point. It's the definition of bad design to implement some untested abstract idea without giving the player any hints.


There are no hard puzzles in Braid, at least not that are required to beat the game, so not sure what you mean. I never played the witness so I don't know about that game.


There is one puzzle piece that you can't reach early in the game; to get it you have to bring a later piece back to the puzzle, put it in its place, then jump on the platform that is drawn on the puzzle piece. But most people just give up in frustration trying to reach the piece because the game hasn't given you enough information to know you need come back for it later.


Braid also has the stars which are so well hidden that I can’t imagine anyone finding them without a walkthrough (though some people obviously did in order to make the walkthroughs).

The Witness is different, it really does teach you everything you need to 100% it. I cheated on the ship puzzle but it’s totally possible to figure out.


Upgrading to new version can also introduce new exploits, no amount of tests can find those.

Some of these can be short-lived, existing only on a minor patch and fixed on the next one promptly but you’ll get it if you upgrade constantly on the latest blindly.

There is always risks either way but latest version doesn’t mean the “best” version, mistakes, errors happens, performance degradation, etc.


Personally, I choose to aggressively upgrade and engage with upstreams when I find problems, not to sit around waiting and hoping somebody will notice the bugs and fix them before they affect me :)


That sounds incredibly stressful.


Well Hetzner's "VPS" [1] is more like the "Cloud" [2] from OVH rather than OVH's VPS [3]

(no /hours pricing, cannot instantly deploy, etc.)

Not that their pricing isn't really really good, but it depends on your use-case. DO / Linode / Upcloud / EC2 / etc. do have an insane pricing in comparison, yes.

[1] https://www.hetzner.com/cloud/

[2] https://www.ovhcloud.com/en-ca/public-cloud/prices/

[3] https://www.ovhcloud.com/en-ca/vps/


I’m surprised the CLI doesn’t asked permission for each program trying to access it, when using their SSH agent I get a popup for any program (then it unlock that key for that program until session ends).

People dismissing this vulnerability miss the point of a password manager which is to protect in such scenario where code gets executed on a machine but at least the data is encrypted, of course in that scenario the attacker can get access to the plain text env variables anyway that the developers has on their machine but at least it is not ALL of your credentials like in this case.

Service Account can limit the blast radius BUT you’ll end up saving that API token in your env anyway giving access to anyone executing malicious code…

Using their CLI is dangerous if they haven’t done anything to protect in this scenario. Did they have any comments in that vulnerability and how they want to mitigate it?

Why not simply return the value of the requested items and that’s it? Why unlock everything in a CLI scenario, surely the most common case is simply grabbing a single item like a .env for a project and that’s it.


I believe the CLI _does_ ask permission for each program trying to access it. The author's example includes a malicious vscode extension abusing the fact that he intentionally granted vscode permission to access the vault for one purpose and then a malicious extension leveraged that access to retrieve information through the op cli.


Borderless window (fullscreen) is now the norm for over a decade, alt-tab is instant in this mode. You’re stuck at whatever resolution you have your desktop but most games now have a render scale option.


Incompetence


You mean "Microsoft"... but that's really the same thing these days.


> Now they just need to figure out a way to push RN apps towards true native.

Isn’t that impossible? If I call native code via binding or their official language, the same thing will happens.


I mean push the devs towards writing native swiftui.


I feel like they could’ve innovated using novel technique, like 3D gaussian splatting (and upscaling the video or better yet record new videos). The vast majority of the time, you’re still pretty much locked unable to move when those CGI character show up, except for turning the camera around (from what I remembered). It could’ve been faked and still work and be much better as I felt it was the only downgrade to an otherwise fantastic remake that I really enjoyed.


They did use real characters in Obduction, which has similar locomotion options to the new Myst and Riven remakes. They used some interesting workarounds to make it work, like only ever seeing characters through gaps, windows or TV screens.


That is what I wondered too after it happened to me, if what I saw was a glimpse into the inner working of how the final image gets to our consciousness, like it was missing some steps / processing.


I still remember when that happened to me, it was quite a bizarre experience. It started after coming back from a meeting where the room was all painted white and had some of the brightest light I had seen and then it started while I was coming back home in the car, it was a sunny winter day with bright white reflected snow.

I didn't feel the pain of a migraine like I usually do but the zigzag pattern started as a very small point in the middle of my vision, got home, lay down on the couch and the circle grew and grew. I'd say around two third of the outline of that circle was a zigzag and I vividly remember that there was a checkboard pattern around the part that wasn't zigzag.

It was hard to see at some point as it became bigger and bigger and I was beginning to panic. But there was an inner circle inside of it of clear vision and once the zigzag circle became so big that it was outside of my vision, I was back to normal vision.

I did some research back then to figure out what happened and saw all those medieval paintings and drawings that people with similar experience did. I would enjoy the experience much more today with that knowledge but it never happened again.

The experience last between 30-60 min.


Sounds similar to me.

I get migraines without the aura that are painful, but the ones with an aura never hurt but are very distracting.

The auras always start the same way - at first I think I just have an afterimage from looking out a bright window or lamp. But after a few minutes I realize that’s it’s not going away and moving into the periphery so I decide to go sit in the dark.


For me my most powerful migraines have an aura attached to them. The visual distraction is nothing more than an omen of the pain I will be in for when it goes away. For me my auras always have some hippy 60s trippy oil smear going on in them which is just scary to me.

My first one happened at work during a very stressful period in my career. It was very scary and I took a sick day to go to the hospital where they hadn't had much experience dealing with this. Bright lights, many questions later and finally getting here's some migraine medicine I was let go to research this on my own.


Same here on all counts.

Mine tended to happen in clusters, with weeks or months with none before the first in what's usually a series.

Based on some research, hunches, and a sense of harmlessness, I started taking magnesium when I notice a first one and rarely (never?) have another anytime soon thereafter.


For myself, I suddenly lost the ability to read. Then I realized that the real problem was that the words were missing. I wasn't conscious of a hole in my vision, it was just that everything in one part of my vision was gone. Kind of like when you see a star in your periphery but when you look at it straight on it's too faint to see.

As time passed, the zigzag pattern appeared and the hole became more obvious. I thought I was going blind and wondered if I had somehow burnt my retina. It wasn't until later that I thought to google the zigzag pattern. It didn't occur to me that other people would have experienced the exact same, very specific pattern.

I also never had a scintillating scotoma again. It happened a couple of weeks after I started ADHD medication so I suspect they're related. I often get bad headaches and that made me wonder if my headaches had been migraines all along.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: