Maybe you can explain this to me... I've heard this countless times over the years, but I can't figure out how it's measured?
Is it based on if MC is taking average human strides? It seems like a ridiculous metric.
Maybe you can explain this to me... I've heard this countless times over the years, but I can't figure out how it's measured?
Is it based on if MC is taking average human strides? It seems like a ridiculous metric.
I'd give em 50 bucks and a swift kick in the dick...but that's the best I care to do.
Mirthdood
Sorry they laugh at you choom...but everyone has a kink, glad you can bring pleasure to people.
Yeah, it's been a long time since I've looked at and kind of RAID/Storage/data preservation stuff... like 256GB spinning platters were the "hot new thing" last time I did.
I'm starting from scratch...in more ways than one lol
Very cool, this is actually the sort of thing I was interested in. I'm looking at building a fairly heavy NAS box before long and I'd love to not have to deal with the expense of a full raid setup.
For stuff like shows/movies, how do they perform after recovery?
Yeah, that's generally my consensus as well. Just curious if someone had a better way that maybe I didn't know about.
I've never been a big fan of RAID for this reason... but I've also never had enough mission critical data that I couldn't just store hard copy backups.
That being said... let me ask you this:
Is there a better way than RAID for data preservation/redundancy?
The Original RDR has been termed "sandbox with a 6-gun". It is infinitely more approachable, and in my humble opinion, the better of the two by far. It has none of the survival/camp manager nonsense, just you and your horse and plenty of random shenanigans to get up to.
Is this repack worth $50? Probably not... but this is definitely the more enjoyable (in everything but graphics) game.
This is just awful...atrocious... how do I avoid seeing this in the wild?
Thanks choom, you reminded me to reinstall Sponsorblock.
I couldn't figure out why they were printing a potato...
That's their game plan to prevent the Onion from purchasing the infowars domain