And this is why the CEO of your company should not be a family relation to the CEO of your main rival company.
And this is why the CEO of your company should not be a family relation to the CEO of your main rival company.
Walkabout minigolf is sick just FYI
Samsung’s OneUI does this by default for all connections .
Why are those wrongs? They are both first steps to technological self sufficiency. Which are both good things from their individual perspectives.
People figured it out before, they’ll do it again. The incentive to do so just needs to be greater than it is now, and that is changing.
It’s coming out on PC which supports modding and VR. It’s not the same thing that’s true but Starfield will receive heavy mod support and a decent VR experience is almost a given on PC eventually in my opinion.
Update your Yuzu application to the latest version. It stopped recompiling for me and simple just loaded the shaders on every boot of the game. Boot times into the game went from ~45s to 2s every time.
It doesn’t seem like AMD has any intention of continuing to develop this project. The reason it went open source in the first place is that AMD stopped funding this project. The dev and AMD had an agreement that he could open source the code once they stop working together. They stopped working together because AMD wanted out of a project that would benefit its products, and that was demonstrated to work well. The dev opened sourced the project as agreed. This was back in Feb this year.
Now AMD are trying to make the source code closed so no one can access it. They are not announcing a closed sourced version of this feature that they are developing themselves as far as I know. So this move is simply to remove code from the Internet that would allow their cards to work better in certain workloads when compared to their competitors. AMD should not have an incentive to do this. Nvidia has an incentive to get rid of this code, yes.
The implication is that AMD is doing this because they don’t want to truly compete with Nvidia. And they don’t want to compete with Nvidia because their CEO’s don’t really want to compete. This is not the first time AMD has simply chosen not to put pressure on Nvidia with AMD seemingly comfortable with their place.