I looked at Screenpipe but it doesn't fill me with confidence. The ideal solution would be a device-agnostic self-hosted service for archiving and searching screenshots. Would make data migration super simple. And then the app snapping the screenshots could be almost trivial.
It's a bundle of 24 high quality games, by talented, diverse and motivated game developers for ~$8 each. And it comes with a free console. Art is worth paying for.
I feel like this is missing the point of Vim a little bit. It's not about using hjkl instead of arrow keys. It's about progressively learning a vast and useful language specifically made for editing text efficiently. And then realizing you can use every single part of that language in a macro. And then realizing you can use that same language to orchestrate those macros.
The music industry has been fighting against the natural economic theories of capitalism ever since the mp3.
Digital files have infinite supply. Draw a classic supply and demand diagram using that information and look at where the price should be. The supply curve is a vertical line at infinity on the x-axis. The demand curve crosses it at $0. Everyone knows and feels this intrinsically.
The artist is the thing with extremely limited supply. Something like Patreon will end up being the correct model.
This argument falls apart because it is using the incorrect definition of “supply”. The “supply” is the amount available on the market. Just because the cost of duplicating a digital file is nearly zero does not mean that the supply is infinite. The supply is limited by laws that restrict who is allowed to duplicate the file and the limited number of people who are willing to break those laws.
Why do you assume this has been tried? It's not even clear what the game is. In this setting, what state and actions would the algorithm have access to?
In some games it could find an equilibrium where it could keep the game going on indefinitely by moving back and forth, for example (which won't work in a game like Go[1], though).
I looked at Screenpipe but it doesn't fill me with confidence. The ideal solution would be a device-agnostic self-hosted service for archiving and searching screenshots. Would make data migration super simple. And then the app snapping the screenshots could be almost trivial.