That is expected β kind of. See also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birthday_problem
Although now that I think of it β¦ the date was given by the developers, so it should be less likely than in the original birthday problem.
That is expected β kind of. See also
I think it's how Czech people speak in their native tongue with expressions that translate poorly into English regarding the emotional message.
Not only u
Pleeeeeease put release day on 29 of September I would have 16 birthday as release of Factorio 1.0 !!!FactorioBot wrote: βFri Nov 15, 2019 3:53 pm Here it is! (beep boop)
https://factorio.com/blog/post/fff-321
Is it just me or does the new one look desaturated and covered in an orange layer?Raiguard wrote: βFri Nov 15, 2019 6:50 pm I went back and found an older version of the same picture, and created a little comparison of before/after the color correction. Enjoy!
MP4 compression makes the new colors look worse than they actually are, but it's still fun to compare.
For a more accurate comparison, here are the old colors, and here are the new colors.
Well, yeah, it make sense. The picture is in the desert biome. And in the color resaturation FFF they even explained the desert is to appear more orange than before.Griffork wrote: βSat Nov 16, 2019 8:00 pmIs it just me or does the new one look desaturated and covered in an orange layer?Raiguard wrote: βFri Nov 15, 2019 6:50 pm I went back and found an older version of the same picture, and created a little comparison of before/after the color correction. Enjoy!
MP4 compression makes the new colors look worse than they actually are, but it's still fun to compare.
For a more accurate comparison, here are the old colors, and here are the new colors.
The nuclear fuel definitely doesn't look as green and all the white/grey parts are now slightly orange.
Lol, Kovarex, if everybody was releasing 1.0 as you did, our world would've been a better placeFactorioBot wrote: βFri Nov 15, 2019 3:53 pm Here it is! (beep boop)
https://factorio.com/blog/post/fff-321
It has an almost entitled feel to it, reading "Factorio was supposed to leave the early access phase at the end of March last year, but - as we already know - ultimately it didn't happen. Despite this, the price has been increased anyway and we are still waiting for the full version of the game. The plus is that the developers, in this case the Wube Software studio, themselves admitted to the mistake and already at the very beginning of the latest announcement published on the official website of the game admitted that its development already takes far too much time."el_penny wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 12:32 am Nice to have a release date!
https://www.gram.pl/news/2019/11/15/poz ... orio.shtml
I am a bit drunk right now but this piece reads a little condescending to me. Someone with power of polish lang could read it and tell for sure. If this is the case I would advise some activity:D
The improved blueprint library hopefully:coppercoil wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 2:37 pm I read the article again and again trying to understand what news we can expect until 1.0.
Someone with power of polish language will tell: it's exactly what it seems, google translate did good enough job and LordWampus summed it up very well.LordWampus wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 1:26 pmIt has an almost entitled feel to it, reading "Factorio was supposed to leave the early access phase at the end of March last year, but - as we already know - ultimately it didn't happen. Despite this, the price has been increased anyway and we are still waiting for the full version of the game. The plus is that the developers, in this case the Wube Software studio, themselves admitted to the mistake and already at the very beginning of the latest announcement published on the official website of the game admitted that its development already takes far too much time."el_penny wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 12:32 am Nice to have a release date!
https://www.gram.pl/news/2019/11/15/poz ... orio.shtml
I am a bit drunk right now but this piece reads a little condescending to me. Someone with power of polish lang could read it and tell for sure. If this is the case I would advise some activity:D
I'm not sure how the writer can call a decision to keep developing a "mistake"? Surely the mistake would be to push out an inferior 1.0 release just to be seen to not be "stuck in early access"? Factorio was in a better place than most AAA titles by .13 and there's nothing stopping anyone going out and buying/enjoying/sacrificing-their-life-to (delete as appropriate) it now.
They also write "purely theoretically, if they decided to share the full version with players now, nothing would probably explode" which indicates a lack of understanding of a) the difference between theoretically and hypothetically and b) how software development works.
I'd consider that the clumsy tone may be down to Google Translate... but the logical fallacies indicate a bog-standard, poorly researched, poorly written hatchet job. This is what passes for journalism in the internet age. So sad.
Tbh it doesn't sounds as bad as here when read in polish. Only strange thing there is that they seem to be dissapointed/annoyed whatever that price has been already increased while 1.0 will be later.Eleenrood wrote: βMon Nov 18, 2019 2:50 pmSomeone with power of polish language will tell: it's exactly what it seems, google translate did good enough job and LordWampus summed it up very well.LordWampus wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 1:26 pmIt has an almost entitled feel to it, reading "Factorio was supposed to leave the early access phase at the end of March last year, but - as we already know - ultimately it didn't happen. Despite this, the price has been increased anyway and we are still waiting for the full version of the game. The plus is that the developers, in this case the Wube Software studio, themselves admitted to the mistake and already at the very beginning of the latest announcement published on the official website of the game admitted that its development already takes far too much time."el_penny wrote: βSun Nov 17, 2019 12:32 am Nice to have a release date!
https://www.gram.pl/news/2019/11/15/poz ... orio.shtml
I am a bit drunk right now but this piece reads a little condescending to me. Someone with power of polish lang could read it and tell for sure. If this is the case I would advise some activity:D
I'm not sure how the writer can call a decision to keep developing a "mistake"? Surely the mistake would be to push out an inferior 1.0 release just to be seen to not be "stuck in early access"? Factorio was in a better place than most AAA titles by .13 and there's nothing stopping anyone going out and buying/enjoying/sacrificing-their-life-to (delete as appropriate) it now.
They also write "purely theoretically, if they decided to share the full version with players now, nothing would probably explode" which indicates a lack of understanding of a) the difference between theoretically and hypothetically and b) how software development works.
I'd consider that the clumsy tone may be down to Google Translate... but the logical fallacies indicate a bog-standard, poorly researched, poorly written hatchet job. This is what passes for journalism in the internet age. So sad.
Not sure I'm reading that right, but what are you doing, taking 17 years to go from proof of concept to prototype? And then apparently the "cheap" thing lasted 20 years and apparently was cheap. Where as your still-prototype has been in the making for 37 years? Sounds like a win for the cheap thing, since it probably consumed much less time for the amount of time it ran.Dry Hairy Tree wrote: βWed Nov 20, 2019 2:19 am As you folks know - you do an amazing job. The thing is, there is danger of you doing your job too well, and I believe you might have recognised this as you've finally released a release date.
Perfectionism, while useful in some circumstances, can be deadly in business. But cheap shoddy goods - we've all had enough of. I spent so long developing a prototype once that someone else made a rubbish version and was awarded $50 000 by our prime minister for their 'innovation' - 17 years after I had proof of concept. That HURT. Not only did I lose the free advertising and first place in the market, but the nationwide kudos for being a very clever bastard with solutions for big problems. Now the cheap crap breaks down and my prototype is still running 20 years later, but nobody cares. An 'also ran' despite winning the race so many years before others even started - perfectionism is like stopping before the finish line to make sure your hair looks ok for the photo.
I always try to be ethical and fastidious when providing any good or service but a lot of folks take advantage of those traits as weaknesses, valuing instead competitiveness, and outright theft. Mimicry is not flattery when it involves your own creations, it is heartbreaking.
I've had my writing, comedy, science and inventing plagiarised. I can take the hits when I don't have people in my employ, and I also have an long list of projects (problems to solve with lucrative/kudos potential) that have caught my interest. Can you say the same?
I want to see this game out. If you got pipped at the post it would hurt me a whole lot. Cos I've been watching your form and I know another perfectionist when I see them. I really hope we all get to see what you have set out to do: Make a great product for a decent price and go above and beyond because you can. You are an exemplar in the game world. So good luck, but get on with it!
I read it as, my prototype from 20 years ago is still running, i was 17 years into the testing when some crappy version of a similar thing went on the market, winning prizes and money, before it appears that it was buggy and unstable on the long run ( because not enough test ? ). Now people think i just copied something that is known for poor quality and won't even try my thing.