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Thales

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Posts posted by Thales

  1. On 03/11/2021 at 10:42 PM, davidsrsb said:

    Anyone who did not know the book would be puzzled by the shields and why guns and especially lasers could not be used.

    It's been years since I read the book. Nevertheless, I remained puzzled. It is explained incidentally in the movie that slow objects penetrate the shields, but I didn't perceive that clue while watching the movie.

    On 03/11/2021 at 10:42 PM, davidsrsb said:

    The lack of computers was also not explained.

    This is actually a correction from what I had previously written. I was thinking about it. I finally remembered that the lack of computers is actually explained in the extended 1984 version of Dune directed by David Lynch. Also on the internet; one place, the fandom.com wiki history of Mentats.

  2. 15 hours ago, andy5995 said:

    Coincidentally, @nanimade a random map named Dune, based on the original movie, if I'm not mistaken.screenshot0023.png

    Well, this popped-up in my news feed yesterday. "Scientists Simulate the Climate of Arrakis. It Turns Out Dune is a Pretty Realistic Exoplanet"

    https://beforeitsnews.com/space/2021/11/scientists-simulate-the-climate-of-arrakis-it-turns-out-dune-is-a-pretty-realistic-exoplanet-2522128.html

    • Like 1
  3. Watched it this past weekend. I guess my quick review, it was a bit short on expectations. I recognize that movies sometimes have to skimp on plot, but having read the book when it first came out in the Paleolithic era :rolleyes: and then seeing both David Lynch and SyFY channel versions of Dune, I was (unrealistically) expecting more. Nevertheless, a must watch.

    • Like 1
  4. When it comes to the most sanctimonious advocates, in the US, regarding global warming they are nothing but "hot air". John Kerry, who has been appointed by US President Biden, to lead the charge famously stated that he had to fly private jets as he was an important person!  So in the name of saving the environment, Kerry believes he has a right to pollute. Very Orwellian. To my knowledge, the elite political leaders in the US are all talk and no-action, as Greta Thunberg highlighted. They do not modify their behavior to practice what they preach.

    At this time, I will focus on Biden's attendance at the Glasgow climate summit.

    https://www.npr.org/2021/10/31/1050958992/biden-says-he-worries-that-cutting-oil-production-too-fast-will-hurt-working-peo

    Quote

    President Biden said on Sunday that the world can't immediately stop using oil and said OPEC and Russia need to pump more of it, even as he pushes the world to pledge to cut climate-changing carbon emissions at the Glasgow climate summit this week.

    What is significant, is that the article purposely fails to mention that Biden created an oil and gas shortage in the US by cancelling and/or prohibiting US oil and gas production. So Biden is creating the problem that he wants (demands) others to fix.  Biden demands that other countries produce more oil.

    Biden has absolutely no sense of responsibility or apparent awareness that he created the problem that he is demanding that others solve. Furthermore, by demanding that OPEC and Russia pump more oil, all that Biden has done is to transfer the negative environmental effects from the US to foreign countries. That does not accomplish the claimed objectives of the Glasgow climate change summit to reduce CO2 emissions. There is an actual possibility that pumping oil in a foreign country with less environmental controls and the need to transport the oil thousands of miles in oceangoing tankers will actually lead to greater CO2 emissions!!!!

    The article also briefly touched on the logistics "traffic jam" in the US. Again, the paper fails to "point the finger of blame" at Biden. Biden is not directly responsible for this logistical nightmare. Nevertheless, Biden's administration appears to be using this "crisis" for naked political gain. Pete Buttigieg, the US Secretary of Transportation, remarked that his problem would not be solved until Biden's infrastructure legislation was passed. Additionally, the "crises" seems to involve certain administrative regulations, that if waived would allow private enterprise to resolve the crises. For example, allowing the use of non-union drivers and to allow truck drivers who own their own trucks to carry cargo. These administrative waivers are not apparently being considered. Consequently, the Biden administration is allowing the logistical nightmare to fester for political gain.

     

     

  5. 31 minutes ago, andy5995 said:

    Generally, if a program is frozen, it can't accept any input, so if a program had a shortcut key combination to kill it in that case, it wouldn't be "seen" by the program.

    Yes, I already acknowledge that point. "... a shortcut key to close 0 A.D. may not have worked anyway..."

     

    31 minutes ago, andy5995 said:

    What operating system are you using?

    Linux Mint.

     

    31 minutes ago, andy5995 said:

    On Linux, from your desktop settings, you could add a keyboard settting (application shortcut) to run "xkill".

    Had tried "xkill". did not work.  While "xkill" did not work, I was able, through the command line, to find the process ID for 0 A.D. and kill it, thereby ending 0 A.D. and also restoring my ability to use the graphical interface.

      

    2 hours ago, sarcoma said:

    If the system hangs, you may restart xorg with ctrl-alt-bksp but it's no longer on by default, you have to write custom xork.conf kb module

    Hadn't heard of that one. Will have to keep it in mind.

     

  6. Well it had to happen. O A..D. crashed and partially locked up my computer. Is there a shortcut key to force 0 A.D. to close?

    Given the fact my computer was partially locked-up, a shortcut key to close 0 A.D. may not have worked anyway. Furthermore, 0 A.D., in partially locking-up my computer made my system monitor unavailable, so I could not "kill" 0 A.D. by that approach. I was able to "kill" 0 A.D. by switching to a different workspace and using the command line.

  7. To bad, I did not see your posts earlier. 0 A.D. locked-up on me. I was able to unlock it by killing the process. After that, i cam to look a the posts. Anyway ...

    On 26/09/2021 at 6:25 AM, LienRag said:
    Problem is I can find no way to get out of the game fullscreen to access the other windows on my Debian Mate computer (on Bullseye).

    I an not familiar with Debian. I do know that with Linux you can establish multiple work spaces. I am using Linux Mint. I have established 4 workspaces and programmed shortcut keys to access each workspace. I was able to "kill" 0 A.D. by switching to a different workspace and stopping it through the command line. An unexpected problem with 0 A.D. was that it locked my ability to use the system monitor to kill the 0 A.D. process. I was forced to use the command line which fortunately worked. So no need to reboot.

    On 26/09/2021 at 6:25 AM, LienRag said:

    What is surprising is that I don't find any process that I can relate to 0ad : what is the name of the processes that I should be searching for ?

    I reloaded 0 A.D. based on this topic and reran the grep command: "ps -ef| grep /usr/games". I did get two results: "/bin/sh /usr/games/0ad" and "/usr/games/pyrogenesis". However, at the time 0 A.D. crashed, I got three results when I ran the grep command. The third result may have been the one where 0 A.D. got hung-up. Unfortunately, I don't recall the name of that process.

    On 27/09/2021 at 3:57 PM, LienRag said:

    I did ask on the Debian forum but did get only partial answers that didn't solve the problem.

    Check-out the Debian forum for creating multiple workspaces and how to create keyboard shortcuts to access each workspace.

     

     

    • Like 1
  8. 1 hour ago, Player of 0AD said:

    Note that bartering and trading are 2 totally different things which have nothing to do with each other except for that you need a market. For bartering, you just need one market, that's it.

    You don't really need a third player for trading. However, if you trade with an ally and not with yourself you will receive a small "international bonus". Notice that trading is not really trading but just resource generation.

    Also notice that trading is not always necessary, gathering and bartering is usually much more efficient.

    I understand what you are saying, but why is it that the AI has more income and is more efficient at bartering?

    "You don't really need a third player for trading." I was just hypothesizing, there are only two players, myself and the AI.

    1 hour ago, Gurken Khan said:

    P1: first wood, then food (in a balance, so you can afford to build the necessary structures and units, research the gathering techs).

    P2: first I 'industrialize' wood & food, then go for stone (to get the gathering techs & p2 structures) and then metal.

    Thanks for those suggestions. When the games starts, I was going for all three in a balanced approach. I will revise to focus on wood/food. The wood/stone/metal.

     

    Technically, any second market that I would build is in the middle of nowhere. No surrounding village. I guess, the markets trade with phantom entities?

  9. When the game ends 0 A.D. displays the closing statistics. There is a tab for "market", which shows data such as income and barter efficiency as two examples. I noted that my income has been $0 and my barter efficiency if very low at 18%. The AI had substantial income and a high barter efficiency rate. I ran across a Reddit which stated that you need to build two markets and trade between them. (As in next to each other?)  Is that correct?

    Since I'm playing "single player" against the AI, I was curious as how trade worked, since it would seem to require a "third" player?

  10. 10 hours ago, ChronA said:

    The elephants as siege weapons trope is definitely ahistorical. However the game engine right now doesn't really simulate the things they were actually used for: breaking enemy morale and stampeding through otherwise immovable infantry blocks.

    You have identified the appropriate uses for elephants: "breaking enemy morale and stampeding through otherwise immovable infantry blocks."

    9 hours ago, BreakfastBurrito_007 said:

    It is true that there is great inaccuracy with elephants in 0ad. But in terms of gameplay, elephants are pretty easy to counter.

    A few tips that might make it easier for you:

    • focus on getting a large population as fast as you can, this will make it easier to afford everything, and the AI's army will seem smaller if you have many more units.
    • skirmishers are a good counter to elephants because they do a lot of pierce damage, and can all attack the elephant at once

    I've been trying to produce Athenian Cavalry Javelineer, but have been having resource shortages.  I also believe that I may also be under-utilizing the Athenian Slinger Militia.

    10 hours ago, MoLAoS said:

    Total War, and every other game, also use elephants as anti-siege, though typically as gate breakers rather than smashing stone walls. Could they be shifted to that?

    Gate smashing looks to be an appropriate use. Nevertheless, it should not be easy for the elephants.

    6 hours ago, Stan` said:

    They could if we use the turret feature for gates.  I believe they need to be patched for that though.

    If gates are turrets units could be restricted to be only able to attack the turret and not the wall. Although since walls are not really used in competitive games it could render elephants useless.

    Elephants would not be "rendered useless", assuming that I understand what you said correctly.  Elephants, in game-play, would remain very effective at destroying buildings and disrupting infantry/cavalry formations.

    • Like 1
  11. Still getting clobbered at the easy level. The nemesis still being the elephants. Stone walls seem to be too weak when attacked by elephants. Historically, have elephants been successful in breaching stone defensive walls?  I'm undecided about the appropriateness of the strength of stone towers and gates when attacked by elephants. I don't have a problem with the appropriateness of strength concerning buildings, such as barracks, when attacked by an elephant since they would be pretty flimsy. 

    I would like to suggest that the defense factor of stone structures (specifically walls) versus elephants be increased.

     

     

  12. In reviewing the manual unit list and Unit Summary Table; I did not see any (Athenian) particular unit being described as effective in combating elephants.  I've been playing the Athenians, so I'm interested in learning more from their point-of-view.

    For example: Pezhetairos are listed as being -> "Good vs Cavalry and Infantry, .. " Which also raises the question: Are elephants in the "cavalry" category?

    Interesting from the Fadom Wiki page: "Hoplites Athenaikos (Athenian Hoplite) [50 f, 50 w, 1 pop, 10 sec]: Melee infantry unit. Deals triple damage against cavalry units." (emphasis added)

    Also: "Epilektos (City Guard) [100 f, 100 w, 50 m, 1 pop, 13 sec]: Champion melee infantry unit. Deals triple damage against cavalry units." (emphasis added)

    Besides the units themselves, what technological advances would be best against elephants?

  13. On 02/09/2021 at 4:24 AM, KBar said:

    I see that 25b packages landed in Impish. That's awesome! Congratulations!

    How about the 20.04 LTS release? Are they coming to it, too?

    Start with this website first:  0 A.D. Alpha 25 Released! Implement Single Player Campaigns [Ubuntu PPA] Skip the click-bait text "Start Download".

    Look for the text string "keep an eye on this Ubuntu PPA"  which references the following Launchpad PPA: Unofficial Ubuntu game packages maintained by xtradeb

    Since posting, I see that the  Official PPA has now been updated.

  14. 7 hours ago, wowgetoffyourcellphone said:

    Bollocks. Any withdrawal from Afghanistan would have been a "disaster" since the entire country is a disaster. It's been clear for years now that all the U.S. was doing was propping up yet another corrupt unpopular government against a local insurgency. The Afghan government was a complete disaster itself.

    Depends on your definition of "disaster". You are correct the US was propping up yet another corrupt government. The US should never have gone into Afghanistan, the "graveyard of empires". From my point of view the "disaster" was the manner in how the withdrawal was handled. Biden and the general pompously declared, over time, that the Afghan army would hold-up and that all contingencies had been planned for. Well, the Afghan army collapsed, US military equipment was left behind, and the US was not prepared to evacuate US citizens from Afghanistan. That military equipment also represents a lot of technology that will now become available to Iran, China, Russia, and Pakistan.

    For comparison, I wonder how the Russian withdrawal (15 May 1988 and ended on 15 February 1989 ) from Afghanistan went?

    7 hours ago, wowgetoffyourcellphone said:

    A completely biased view of the political landscape.

    Ok, but I will say that it is the correct viewpoint.

    7 hours ago, wowgetoffyourcellphone said:

    "Some people say..."

    Of course, that was the preamble to my question that I was soliciting input for. "I've been reading second hand accounts that European leaders are less than pleased with Biden's leadership. I would be interested in knowing what the perception is from Europe." Thanks for responding as I wanted those that had better knowledge of the European take.

    7 hours ago, wowgetoffyourcellphone said:

    Likely they would prefer Biden to Trump or Dubya. You're right though, Biden is no Obama.

    Thanks for answering.

  15. Afghanistan, in the US, is a hot topic. From my point of view, the US should never have gone into Afghanistan or Iraq, but that is "water under the bridge". The US withdrawal that was just completed is/was a complete disaster. As such, it is a reflection of the total incompetence of the Biden administration.

    Biden misleadingly claimed that he would "heal the soul of America" and that he would restore US prestige on the world stage. Instead Biden has fostered divisive racism and he has apparently dissed US allies based on the manner in which he withdrew US forces from Afghanistan. China even rightfully tossed Biden racist remarks back at US diplomats when they held a meeting in Anchorage, AK in March 2021. Instead of restoring US prestige, Biden is giving the US a "black eye".

    I've been reading second hand accounts that European leaders are less than pleased with Biden's leadership. I would be interested in knowing what the perception is from Europe.

  16. I liked this one, as that is what happened.

    Quote

    First decrease the population limit in game setup to either 100 or 150 as you progress.  At this population limit its much harder for the enemy to overwhelm you with a massive army early in the game. (emphasis added)

    This was also helpful, since I remember from the MS version of Age of Empires, which I had long since forgotten about.

    Quote

     keep your workers' walking distances short: build farms next to CC/farmstead, build storehouses near wood/minerals (emphasis added)

    One thing that has really slowed me down, is which building is which? I know that you can click on the building to "activate" it which identifies the building, but having a hover label on a building would be helpful. Yes, the building look different, but as of yet, have not developed that sensitivity to the visual cues.  Would be nice to have building labels pop-up when the mouse hovers over it.

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