Finally announcing my 1st Steam game! Brazilian Street Food Simulator. I'm making it alone on my free time, a genre that I love, in a theme that I love even more (Brazilian food).
Wishlist on Steam or I'll quit.
#indiegame#indiedev#madewithunreal#UE4
BRAZILIAN STREET FOOD SIMULATOR - Game Announcement!
Experience the dynamics of Brazilian Street Food, like Sugar Cane Juice and Pastel. Play with typical equipment and processes from 🇧🇷 street vendors. A casual simulator game.
Wishlist on Steam!
#indiegame#indiedev
The NEW COURSE is finally out!!! 🕹️🙀
This is my love letter to the OG PlayStation!!!
We'll cover the PS1 Hardware, MIPS assembler, C & PsyQ SDK, 3D graphics, fixed-point math, PS1 quirks, RISC pipeline, and much (!) more...
Enroll: 🔗pikuma.com/courses/ps1-progr…
See you inside!
Today I ported rImGui to cimgui, so it's now possible to use raylib + cimgui in pure C (i.e. the beloved Dear ImGui with raylib in pure C).
I'm going to clean up it tomorrow and then publish it. #raylib#ImGui
Unfortunately, maintaining a search engine requires a lot of money, and I don't think it's possible to get that kind of money unless you mention "AI" nowadays. So it's DoA.
That's why I believe the idea of web rings + directories coming back is actually viable.
But it needs a way to avoid AI generated content that now pollutes all layers and levels of the web.
Is the solution good old school webrings of HUMAN MADE blogs + good old FORUMS + good old WEB DIRECTORIES?
With Google being enshittified-Google, with a search that barely works and that you can't trust anymore, and now with DuckDuckGo adding AI, what is left?
I sense an opportunity to create a new search engine that *just works*? Like the old Google that we all trusted and loved.
Here's a fun AI story: a security researcher noticed that large companies' AI-authored source-code repeatedly referenced a nonexistent library (an AI "hallucination"), so he created a (defanged) malicious library with that name and uploaded it.
1/
🤯 The level of sophistication of the XZ attack is very impressive! I tried to make sense of the analysis in a single page (which was quite complicated)!
I hope it helps to make sense of the information out there. Please treat the information "as is" while the analysis progresses! 🧐 #infosec#xz
xz backdoor: a sneaky single dot "."
- Left screenshot: Malicious commit by Jia Tan.
- Right screenshot: Fix today by Lasse Collin, removal of the dot.