• Artyom@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    Huge -> literally nothing will change, even for die-hard half life fans.

      • glimse@lemmy.world
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        6 hours ago

        I’m guessing he signed an NDA so I’m not sure what he was thinking distributing it so publicly.

          • glimse@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            NDA was the wrong term to use there but I’m sure there was a “don’t give the game to anyone” in there they might be enforceable. I hope they don’t sue, though

    • Zahille7@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      “Burning” a CD means copying it. Idk why. I used to have someone in my family who would burn movies for everyone so we didn’t have to pay to rent or own.

      • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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        5 hours ago

        It is sort of surreal to see someone so young they don’t know what burning a CD is in an article about a game older than CD burners.

      • Flamekebab@piefed.social
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        4 hours ago

        Burning is writing a disc. Ripping is extracting data from a disc. Whoever wrote the article used lingo they don’t understand.

        • stoy@lemmy.zip
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          4 minutes ago

          That is what I thought, I have burned many discs in my day, and I have never got an ISO from bruning a disc.

      • Coelacanth
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        5 hours ago

        I haven’t thought about burning CDs in a long time, man that takes me back. Remember Nero Burning ROM?

        I think the etymology of the term is that when you’re writing data onto a disk you’re shooting a laser onto it to alter the chemistry and change its color, for which “burning” the data into it makes sense.

        • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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          5 hours ago

          It wasn’t the colour, you would burn little bubbles into the disk. The bubbles would deflect a laser and flat parts would not. This would give the 0 or 1 bits.

          There were CD- and CD+ versions. I don’t know which is which but one would create a divot, and the other would create a bubble. Either way the laser is diverted away from the sensor.

          • Coelacanth
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            4 hours ago

            Ah, that’s what it was! I always thought it was just a different color for 0 and 1, today I learned! That makes more sense when I think about it.

            • MeThisGuy@feddit.nl
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              3 hours ago

              CD - red laser

              BlueRay - blue laser… shorter wavelength --> more data on same size disk

              and inbetween there was DL - dual layer
              light scribe - could etch a picture on the top of the cd
              and RW - rewriteable CDs

              (CD is short for compact disc)

      • AmbiguousProps@lemmy.today
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        5 hours ago

        Burning was originally used in the sense that to write to a disc you used the laser to “burn” in your data, at least irrc. It just started to be used interchangeably for copy and write operations. These days I think “rip” makes more sense.