[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 6 points 5 hours ago

A Shelter Full of Cats I'm a sucker for any game from Devcats.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 9 points 5 hours ago

I was hoping that would go away when covid stuck around. People still want to shake hands!

shakes head

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

Quality Ultra HD shitpost

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 6 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago)

So, most of my recommendations are going to be FPS or first person. For Valve related stuff:

  • Half-Life 2 is pretty much a must have along with Episodes 1 and 2.
  • Black Mesa is a remake of the original.
  • Entropy : Zero 2 is a fantastic fan made mod that's a good follow up after finishing Half-Life 2 and the episodes.
  • The original Entropy : Zero is pretty good, but the default difficulty is hard as hell.
  • Portal 1 and 2 are also a must have
  • Portal: Revolution is an independent mod that's a good follow up after 2.

As for non-Valve games and related:

  • Crab Champions - fast paced, third-person, rogue-like shooter.
  • Talos Principle 1 and 2 - first-person puzzles with a serious philosophical scifi story. It actually gets a bit heavy when it discusses mortality and death. 1 is being remade into a "definitive edition".
  • Untitled Goose Game - Honk!
  • Gnorp Apologue - fun little game
  • Pineapple on pizza - it's free. I would describe it as games-as-art.
  • Any of the Serious Sam games. They were made for PC.
  • Fallen Aces is still in early access, but a good story driven retro FPS with sprites and multiple ways of navigating each level.
  • Trepang2 - a bit of an odd FPS with bullet time.
  • Roboquest - rogue like FPS
  • Exit 8 - horror walking simulator. Kinda short once you figure it out.
  • APE OUT - Ape smash! Top down "shooter".
  • Hotline Miami 1 and 2 - top down shooters with fast deaths and excellent soundtracks
  • The Binding of Isaac - has always been popular if a little dated
  • Gunpoint - stealth puzzle third person. Came out a decade ago, but a good game.
  • Party Hard - little indie murder-everyone-and-don't-get-caught.
  • The Stanley Parable - walking simulator with some interesting dialog and interactions. 9-to-5 office people can relate.
  • Dusk - awesome boomer shooter
  • Antichamber - came out a decade ago, but it's mind bending first-person puzzles.
  • Hades and Hades 2 which is in early access. Third person isometric rogue-like.
  • The Invincible - Story driven walking simulator based off the book of the same name. Good story.
  • Firewatch - story driven walking simulator
  • Deep Rock Galactic - wasn't my pint of beer, but a lot of people like it.
[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago

Half-Life 2 is pretty much a must have. Black Mesa is a good remake of the original.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 23 points 23 hours ago

Do these designers not have children?

Their children are furry and meow. But in all seriousness, I would consider it an engineering oversight for not considering how their product is being used in real households.

Even I have to clean up when I miss; which happens max, max, 95% of the time.

You miss a max of 95% of the time? 🙃 On a related note, most people are bad with percentages.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago

One of the first albums I bought, and I listened the hell out of it.

105

For years, Wellpath, the largest commercial provider of health care in jails and prisons across 37 states, has been the target of federal lawsuits and scrutiny by lawmakers for its practices that have been alleged to cause long-term health problems and the deaths of dozens of incarcerated individuals.

As part of the bankruptcy proceedings, a federal judge in Texas granted a pause in all lawsuits that involve Wellpath. Legal proceedings in such cases can take years in normal circumstances, but Wellpath's bankruptcy means dozens of those cases, like the Capaci case, are on hold for the foreseeable future.

230

Reporting Highlights

  • An Insurer Sanctioned: Three states found United’s algorithmic system to limit mental health coverage illegal; when they fought it, the insurer agreed to restrict it.
  • A Patchwork Problem: The company is policing mental health care with arbitrary thresholds and cost-driven targets, highlighting a key flaw in the U.S. regulatory structure.
  • United’s Playbook Revealed: The poorest and most vulnerable patients are now most at risk of losing mental health care coverage as United targets them for cost savings.

Around 2016, government officials began to pry open United’s black box. They found that the nation’s largest health insurance conglomerate had been using algorithms to identify providers it determined were giving too much therapy and patients it believed were receiving too much; then, the company scrutinized their cases and cut off reimbursements.

By the end of 2021, United’s algorithm program had been deemed illegal in three states.

But that has not stopped the company from continuing to police mental health care with arbitrary thresholds and cost-driven targets, ProPublica found, after reviewing what is effectively the company’s internal playbook for limiting and cutting therapy expenses. The insurer’s strategies are still very much alive, putting countless patients at risk of losing mental health care.

255
submitted 2 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world
88
submitted 2 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world

Hurricane Milton dumped so much rain over parts of Florida’s Tampa Bay area that it qualified as a 1-in-1,000-year rainfall event.

St. Petersburg had 18.31 inches of rain — or more than 1.5 feet — in the 24-hour period during which the storm made landfall, according to precipitation data from the National Weather Service.

That included a staggering 5.09 inches in one hour, from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. ET — a level considered to have roughly a 0.1% chance of happening in any given year.

101
submitted 3 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world

Black girls face more discipline and more severe punishments in public schools than girls from other racial backgrounds, according to a groundbreaking new report set for release Thursday by a congressional watchdog.

The report, shared exclusively with NPR, took nearly a year-and-a-half to complete and comes after several Democratic congressional members requested the study. Massachusetts Rep. Ayanna Pressley and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, later with support from Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro, asked the Government Accountability Office in 2022 to take on the report.

Over the course of the 85-page report, the GAO says it found that in K-12 public schools, Black girls had the highest rates of so-called "exclusionary discipline," such as suspensions and expulsions. Overall, the study found that during the 2017-18 school year, Black girls received nearly half of these punishments, even as they represent only 15% of girls in public schools.

689
submitted 3 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world
156
submitted 3 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/news@lemmy.world
  • A new rule proposal from the Biden administration would prohibit products that are subject to U.S.-China tariffs from being eligible for a special customs exemption.

  • The de minimis loophole allows packages with a value of less than $800 to enter the United States with relatively little scrutiny.

  • Officials say a recent explosion in the number of de minimis shipments is due largely to Chinese-linked online retail giants like Shein and Temu.

11

What would happen inside an electromechanical central office if you left your phone off hook?

From the channel Connections Museum

49

AMD is warning about a high-severity CPU vulnerability named SinkClose that impacts multiple generations of its EPYC, Ryzen, and Threadripper processors. The vulnerability allows attackers with Kernel-level (Ring 0) privileges to gain Ring -2 privileges and install malware that becomes nearly undetectable.

Tracked as CVE-2023-31315 and rated of high severity (CVSS score: 7.5), the flaw was discovered by IOActive Enrique Nissim and Krzysztof Okupski, who named privilege elevation attack 'Sinkclose.'

Full details about the attack will be presented by the researchers at tomorrow in a DefCon talk titled "AMD Sinkclose: Universal Ring-2 Privilege Escalation."

529

Public sentiment on the importance of safe, lifesaving childhood vaccines has significantly declined in the US since the pandemic—which appears to be solely due to a nosedive in support from people who are Republican or those who lean Republican, according to new polling data from Gallup.

In 2019, 52 percent of Republican-aligned Americans said it was "extremely important" for parents to get their children vaccinated. Now, that figure is 26 percent, falling by half in just five years. In comparison, 63 percent of Democrats and Democratic leaners said it was "extremely important" this year, down slightly from 67 percent in 2019.

4
37
submitted 5 months ago by DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world to c/world@lemmy.world

Last week, the World Health Organization called attention to an mpox outbreak in South Africa. Officials there confirmed 20 cases between May 8 and July 2, with 18 hospitalizations and three deaths.

Another concern is the Democratic Republic of Congo, where an outbreak that began last year has been accelerating — and where the variant is dramatically deadlier than the mpox strain of 2022. About 6% of people who get this type of mpox are dying from it — compared to a 0.2% death rate for the 2022 strain. Most of the deaths in the DRC outbreak are among children.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 158 points 11 months ago

Now do courthouses and see how well that goes.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 271 points 11 months ago

Found the article where the screenshot came from, and wow it's even more infuriating! The VideoLAN folks tried to work with them for months, and Unity seems to have cranial rectal inversion.

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 264 points 11 months ago

You know what's free (as in beer and speech) and not being enshittified? Notepad++

[-] DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world 201 points 1 year ago

Microsoft really needs an antitrust smackdown with their repeated behavior.

view more: next ›

DocMcStuffin

joined 2 years ago