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Joined 1 month ago
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Cake day: June 4th, 2025

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  • I think that 30% is too large of a cut, but nobody is forcing devs to release on Steam. Valve has created enormous value for that 30% that has kept both Devs and Players on their platform, and preferring over the open competition.

    Its different than say, Apple getting 30%, because both users and developers are locked in. Apple has no reason or incentive to improve their platform. To offer more, or make the experience better for Developers. Every single steam user is free to use Epic or GoG or anything else on PC. Developers are also free to release anywhere on PC and free to go outside of steam for addons and DLC.

    For that, I don’t get overly upset at Valve’s cut. The provide value and basically zero lockin.




  • There’s nothing saying you can’t have ports forwarded for the NAS, and have a VPN for everything else. Censorship may be a problem, but those more often block VPN services like NordVPN, not protocols. So running your own is less likely to be stopped. That said, of course comply with local laws, I don’t know where you live or what’s legal there.

    If you really want multiple things exposed at the same time, you have two options(which can be used in combination if needed/wanted):

    1. A reverse proxy. I use caddy. I give it a config file that says what address and port binds to what hostname, and I forward port 443/80 to it. That works great for web content.
    2. Use custom ports for everything. I saw someone else walking you through that. It works, but is a little harder to remember, so good notes will be important.

    I still recommend against forwarding a lot of ports as a beginner. It’s very common for software and web apps to have security vulnerabilities, and unless you are really on top of it, you could get hit. Not only does that put all your internal devices at risk, not just the one that was original breached, it also will likely become part of a botnet, so your local devices will be used to attack other people. I’d recommend getting confident with your ability to maintain your services and hardening your environment first.







  • There are two major advantages to what Nintendo did. The plastic top significantly increases shatter resistance. Look at Jerryrig Everything’s review to see, it’s almost impossible to break the screen now via blunt force, which is a big problem for people with kids. Surface scratches are far better than a shattered screen.

    The second advantage is that you can put a glass screen protector on it and get the best of both worlds. A replaceable glass surface that is nice and hard. What I think would have made it better is if the console came with a pre-installed glass protector that was replaceable.



  • The emoji thing is built into the keyboard, but it doesn’t do like on-device generation or anything. They just have a list of pre-made(maybe AI generated) combos. I’m guessing they are AI generating them, then having humans approve it, before including it in the keyboard emoji list. It’s kinda neat, in that it expands the options, but really not much. Overall the OS really feels the same. I haven’t looked forward to an Android update in many years.

    Also, as someone who doesn’t use Google’s launcher or keyboard, yeah, I get almost none of these features.