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  9. Adding @[Depo] as Coordinator of VGR Project
    2 points
  10. Eid Mubarak to all Muslims around the world. May Allah shower His blessings upon us and accept our sincere prayers. Wishing you and your loved ones a joyous Eid filled with peace and happiness.
    1 point
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  12. i admire members who don't give up. Your activity has been stable since your last request. keep it up
    1 point
  13. That's wonderful. Since he said so, and based on your activity, I'll give you Pro. Good luck!
    1 point
  14. عيد مبارك علي كل المسلمين وعلي اخواتنا في غزه
    1 point
  15. dead men tell no tales ---- no @The GodFather?
    1 point
  16. Congratulation bro & Happy eid
    1 point
  17. @Otman™ not now hahaha I am KINGG!
    1 point
  18. Nickname: GL HERO SHIMA Video author: Typical Gamer Name of the game: Fortnite Link video: Rate this video 1-10: 10
    1 point
  19. Following pushes from the community to do so— particularly from George Hotz' Tiny Corp— AMD has finally started open sourcing some of their GPU software stack and documentation, including open-sourcing their MES (Micro-Engine Scheduler). Open-sourcing of the MES was one of the things that Tiny Corp predicted AMD would do last month, though they seemed to have predicted a turnaround time well sooner than the one we actually got. As-is, we're still waiting for the full release— this is just AMD announcing their intent to do it. For those unfamiliar with Tiny Corp, the important thing to know is that they're responsible for building "TinyBox", which is their design for an AI-powered server using AMD hardware. While the TinyBox indeed shows the potential power of AMD's raw GPU compute, deeper issues seemed to force Tiny Corp to make an Nvidia version, as well, citing that the AMD machine simply doesn't work as intended. The ongoing updates to AMD's ROCm platform alongside this news should hopefully mean that the AMD TinyBox is competitive as an AI solution against Nvidia sooner rather than later. Since MES was the most important thing that needed to be open-sourced according to TinyCorp, the resultant bug fixes may be just enough to make the AMD TinyBox (and AMD AI hardware in general) look more competitive against Team Green. As it stands, it seems like nearly everybody is hoping to undercut Nvidia's dominant position in AI hardware and pro workloads. https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-components/gpus/amd-announces-open-sourcing-of-its-gpu-software-stack-and-documentation-including-mes
    1 point
  20. Consumers remain concerned about increases in the cost of living but are still determined to purchase gadgets they need, according to a survey conducted by TechRadar, one of our sister sites. Along with announcing the survey results, TechRadar also launched a major redesign and rebranding today with the aim of highlighting its ability to help readers find the right products at the right prices. Conducted on 13,797 consumers in the UK and the U.S. across four time periods between May 2022 and March 2023, the survey included 2,319 respondents who were TechRadar readers. The poll’s results indicate that people in both countries plan to or already have made changes to their spending habits in order to save money. Of the respondents who were TechRadar readers, 50 percent in both countries reported that they had cut back on streaming subscriptions while 47 and 38 percent in the UK and U.S. respectively said that they were eating out less frequently. Despite other cutbacks in their lives, only 24 percent of UK readers and 18 percent of U.S. readers said they would delay a planned tech purchase. However, 40 percent of all respondents and 37 percent of TechRadar readers indicated that they would be spending less on electronics in the near future. Not surprisingly, 86 percent of all respondents and 90 percent of TechRadar readers agreed with the statement that “it’s more important than ever to get a good deal.” https://www.tomshardware.com/news/techradar-survey-shows-consumer-purchase-intent
    1 point
  21. At Future Publishing Limited, we rely on advertising to keep bringing you the content you love to read. The majority of the content on Tom's Hardware is created solely by our editorial team, but on occasion, we also work with external partners to create content we hope our readers will find interesting and useful. In some cases, the partner provides content for us, but in others, they support us in producing content, but we maintain editorial independence. This additional content is labeled so you can see who has funded it and how it was created, and we have created this page to make it clear to you exactly what those labels mean about how the content you're reading was funded. Supported Editorial Articles that are labeled as being written ‘In association’ with are independent editorial articles created by writers employed by Tom's Hardware that have been funded through the support of a commercial partner. When planning supported content, a senior editor will agree on the topic and the headline of the article with the funding partner but is not obliged to take further direction from the partner. The article is written by a Tom's Hardware journalist, or one under the direction of a Tom's Hardware senior editor, and posted to Tom's Hardware. It is not sent to the funding partner for approval. This content abides by the Editors’ Code of Practice from the Independent Press Standards Organisation. https://www.tomshardware.com/news/content-funding-on-tomshardware
    1 point
  22. Nothing oozes more revulsion than the mere mention of a cockroach - that unsightly creepy crawly that gives you the heebie-jeebies yet remains a darling child in the eyes of an evolutionary biologist thanks to its seemingly invincible lifespan. It's this immortality that enabled gacha fans to associate such vermin with the Girls Frontline franchise as it keeps a steady momentum despite operating on paper-thin revenue. Ironic as it’s built a foundation of fair monetisation practices and goodwill with rich, albeit depressing lore. To keep their legacy afloat they introduced not one but four spin-offs/sequels. And considering Project Neural Cloud, the prequel of the first Girls Frontline turned out to be a robust game, ignoring its financial performance, surely we can trust MICA’s bank of talents and experience to deliver good on their sequels, right? In this game, it's always adrenaline on the clock as you're constantly on the move, scraping by whatever commissions you can to make ends meet as a bounty hunter after S&K's downfall that saw the world plunged into another cliched calamity. Exilium takes place ten years after the events of its ongoing first instalment in the year 207X, so expect a lot of mind-boggling time-skips. Don't feel weirded out when characters act chummy with one another despite what seems to be their first encounter. Cinematic high-quality cutscenes bordering on Michael Bay’s level of theatrics are peppered between story chapters, semi-animated images of characters with dynamic expressions and voice acting to boot. https://www.pocketgamer.com/gfl2-exilium/review/
    1 point
  23. Upcoming multiplayer combat foot-racing game DeathSprint 66 looks pretty cool, but I still might be a little nervous if I were responsible for making back its budget. A genre of news story we've become pretty familiar with is "niche multiplayer game was great, but not enough people played it to justify keeping the servers on." Knockout City, for example, shut down a couple years after it launched. Rumbleverse lasted only six months. At the Game Developers Conference last month, DeathSprint 66 director Andrew Willans told me that he's confident in the game, saying that playtesters are "overwhelmingly finding something which is very fresh." That freshness, he thinks, is due in part to the scope of the project: It's a medium-sized game from a medium-sized team, and will be "sensibly priced." "I think that [under $70] price bracket … it allows you to be a bit more creative," said Willans. "If you've got a more limited budget than triple-A, and you've got a more limited timeframe to do it, I think you get more innovation on that scale. It's not indie, and it's not triple-A, it's somewhere in between. And when I look at the indie market and the amount of innovation constantly being pushed, there are really exciting things there which you don't tend to see in the bigger triple-A games. And I think there's this lovely middle ground, where we're aiming to be as a studio." https://www.pcgamer.com/games/racing/smaller-games-can-be-more-creative-says-designer-who-made-one-of-ubisofts-most-acclaimed-games-with-a-tiny-team/
    1 point
  24. Audi is updating the S3 sedan for 2025 with extra power and chassis revisions. It also gets the torque-splitting rear end function from the RS3, which includes a drift mode. We expect the revised S3 to arrive in America later this year. UPDATE 4/8/24: Audi released more details and new photos of the updated S3 sedan. We have updated this story accordingly. The middle child of the Audi A3 lineup is inching closer to its big sibling. For 2025, the S3 gains horsepower and torque, benefits from chassis revisions, and adopts the rear-end torque-split function from the top-dog RS3. The car also has some visual tweaks, including new headlights and taillights and four new exterior colors. With new output figures of 328 horsepower and 310 pound-feet of torque, the turbocharged 2.0-liter inline-four is 22 horsepower and 15 pound-feet stronger than before. Audi claims a 62 mph time of 4.4 seconds, but considering we got the old S3 to 60 mph in just 4.3 seconds, the new one will likely beat that time. Audi also claims that the seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission features quicker shifts. To enhance the auditory experience, there's a newly available performance exhaust system with a titanium silencer. https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a46769502/2025-audi-s3-preview/
    1 point
  25. Railway nostalgia, the world’s oldest football, fenland skies and a little-known bard are among the highlights of Crewe, Stirling, Boston and Barnstaple Chris Moss Tue 9 Apr 2024 07.00 BST These oft-bypassed towns have all been, at some period in history, influential if not necessarily powerful; wealth-creating though hardly opulent; and vital to the nation’s wealth and security while never fully rewarded for it. Communications and trade once gave some urban centres the edge over others. Churches and marketplaces were social magnets. Today a brand-name art gallery, celebrity residents, or media chatter are most likely to generate appeal, however specious. What if estate agents sold houses using poetry, memories, polyglotism, ruins and rust? https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2024/apr/09/where-tourists-seldom-tread-part-9-crewe-boston-barnstaple-stirling
    1 point
  26. The uncertainty around how financial rule breaches are handled "makes a mockery of the Premier League", says Luton Town midfielder Andros Townsend. Everton were docked two points for a second violation of the Premier League's profit and sustainability rules (PSR) on Monday. They say they will appeal against the decision but the process may not be completed before the season ends. That could leave clubs uncertain of their top-flight status after 19 May. PSR rules permit clubs to lose £105m over three years and Everton were found to have breached that by £16.6m for the three-year period to 2022-23. The points deduction has dropped Everton one place to 16th in the Premier League, two points above the relegation zone. Monday Night Club: Liverpool lose lead and Everton lose points Visit our dedicated Everton page The Toffees also had a 10-point deduction reduced to six on appeal in February for the three-year period to 2021-22 while Nottingham Forest were deducted four points for PSR breaches in March and are awaiting the outcome of an appeal. Luton sit just inside the drop zone - separated from 17th-placed Forest on goal difference - and Townsend says his club still look at the league as though no points have been deducted because of the uncertainty surrounding hearings and appeals processes. "We don't know what's going to happen with appeals," the former Everton player told BBC Radio 5 Live's Monday Night Club. "We were probably celebrating when Everton got 10 points taken off them and then they got four given back and we're back in the relegation zone. So we take out the deductions to take away the confusion and we'll see at the end of the season." Townsend said that he does not advocate for teams receiving points deductions and that the way in which they are handed out "doesn't make sense". He added: "I think it makes a mockery of the Premier League. When you announce the charge, you have to be certain of the points deduction." The 2023-24 season technically remains 'live' until the annual general meeting in June when relegated clubs transfer their certificates and 24 May has been selected as a 'backstop date' for the appeals process to be concluded. Townsend said he thinks clubs had not anticipated that punishments for breaching the rules would be "this severe". "Everton would have known they weren't going to be inside that £105m debt mark because they spent £30m in the summer," he said. "They spent that knowing they weren't going to make this £105m target. I think clubs just thought it would be a fine and a slap on the wrists and get on with it." The Premier League had asked for a five-point deduction for Everton but an independent commission concluded that the fact Everton have already been punished this season "for losses in years which overlap with the years at issue in these proceedings" merited a two-point reduction in punishment. A further point was credited back for the loss of revenue after a sponsorship deal with Russian company USM was suspended, along with the early admission of guilt. https://www.bbc.com/sport/football/68764608
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  27. 1 point
  28. Truuuue U again @BS Angela Ofc Hhhhhhh hiya li rahom yhadro 3liha bzaf🤣🤣
    1 point
  29. Haha sahara is shit. Ervy lost elzctricity @LeenaXDti
    1 point
  30. nah i aint ur maid :3 next @Skrillex#
    1 point
  31. I was sleeping yo Nopee its me told u come make coscos to ur daddy Next is @jayden™
    1 point
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  35. @Osiris Has Been added to our team. Welcome...
    1 point
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