
Yeah I remember everyone was doing the moonwalk back in the day. Even me.
Yeah I remember everyone was doing the moonwalk back in the day. Even me.
I forgot about the robot! Yeah, that's in this one too.
They probably spend it all on Friday night.
I hope you're paying your farmhands enough!
Yeah, it's definitely addictive, and designed that way. I check Twitter two or three times a day, but I mostly follow Pixlbit people and authors I like, so my feed isn't too toxic. I rarely interact with people, especially people I don't know.
I'm more active on facebook, but that's just my friends.
I remember Hexen. That's a game that's due for a modern remake or rebirth.
Star Fox might not hold up too well today, but I remember being astonished by it back in the day. I never had a SNES, but I would go over to my friend's to play his.
I've always wanted to play a Kirby game, but I never buy them. I'd like to buy the one for Switch... but I'm hoping for a discount that will never come.
I played the first Geometry wars on the 360 I think. Fun game.
It really is an impressive game. I used to think Dragon Quest VIII couldn't be topped, but 11 is amazing.
That's more places than I could think of! :)
That's crazy. I would definitely play that.
I think Baker's argument is that newspapers (especially small, local ones that are not as saved as much as like the NYTimes) are historical documents, and though it might be far-fetched, digital files can be manipulated. Historians are going to be looking at these newspapers when they catalog what went on. But I also understand that it takes space and money to keep them, and they're also harder to access than digital files, and aren't searchable. Ideally, we'd have both.
Card catalogs are definitely antiquated, but I feel nostalgic for them myself sometimes. Funny how quick the world changed.