Meta/Facebook is hungry for growth, doggedly persistent, ethically flexible, and operating with an essentially unlimited budget. Like it or not, it appears the team behind this effort has the vision and market momentum to make it happen.
Meta/Facebook is hungry for growth, doggedly persistent, ethically flexible, and operating with an essentially unlimited budget. Like it or not, it appears the team behind this effort has the vision and market momentum to make it happen.
If anyone hasn’t seen them, software engineer CryoByte33 delves into such performance issues and provides some utilities to help mitigate them:
In case anyone hasn’t seen the link:
From an architectural design standpoint, the PS3 is kind of fascinating. It’s impressive how good many of its games still look today.
As you can imagine, while the multi-core design of Cell accelerates emerging techniques such as procedural generation, none of these designs are particularly simple to implement, especially considering game studios prefer codebases that can be shared across different platforms. […]
It appears that even with a supercomputer chip, Sony still had to fetch a GPU to finalise the PlayStation 3. This makes you wonder if IBM/Sony/Toshiba hit a wall while trying to scale Cell further, so Sony had no option but to get help from a graphics company.
The pitch for federalization gives the misleading impression that the system provides a universal (or at least portable) account mechanism. It seems to be a common point of uncertainty with users taking a look at the emerging platform.
From a usability standpoint, the sign-in process ought to be able to tell when someone is trying to join from a non-local instance, and provide means to redirect or authenticate them appropriately. Maybe something in the style of “Sign in with Google,” only simpler.
I think upcoming versions of Lemmy/Kbin are attempting to improve link behavior to make it less likely to unintentionally stray from your home instance.
All these federated services suffer from similar well-publicized problems, but Calckey appears to offer one of the nicer user interface schemes so far. Though unrelated, maybe the rebrand can help build mindshare for Firefox.