Wow. Does anyone share software from “the russian hacker” Valdik outside the RUNet? That’s the first time I’ve seen it.
Wow. Does anyone share software from “the russian hacker” Valdik outside the RUNet? That’s the first time I’ve seen it.
Agreed. I’m using the native Windows version, written in C#. The developer stopped updating it because he switched to a cross-platform version. I take his point, as not everyone has experience with the technologies that are available on all systems. Electron is the solution. However, even the older version has all the features I need and an awesome UI/UX!
I would recommend Sayonara Player for Linux. It’s not as awesome as Dopamine, but I still love it. I couldn’t find anything better for Linux!
[Edit]
Dopamine. The best player after some years of searching.
True. Popular books being read by millions of people have no reviews. That’s why I’m on the LibraryThing now.
Now it’s completely dependent on Bing’s results! I’d even say it does a worse job than Bing. I compared results for different queries and Bing was much better than Qwant! In fact, if you read their privacy policy, they sell your private data to anyone who asks for it.
100%!
I’ve read that tedium. Some chapters revealed something interesting, but everything else was empty. Why do I need to know what kind of wine the developers drank and in what pub after the bad news got announced to them?
This book’s core issues are very important. The book itself sucks!
I fell in love with Tenorite.
I really enjoyed the game in many aspects, especially some of the mechanics and art style.
But I eventually dropped it. Two reasons:
Honestly, if they added some depth to the core mechanics and complexity that depends on skill rather than random events on the map and resource types, it would be one of my favorite games. As it is…
Might be helpful to someone: flibusta.is, flibusta.site, flisland.net. Flibusta is the largest pirate library in Russian.
Wow, the first source is awesome! Didn’t know about it before, but now I will actively use it!
Yeah.
The video author can enable a setting to analyze the comments. YouTube itself flags comments that it deems inappropriate. The author only chooses which videos to include this tweak and the level of strictness.
It is enabled by default.