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DanGleeSack

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It's Bethesda's property regardless of how similar it is or not... You used their assets, tools, and IP. It builds on their leased engine and game play. It doesn't matter if you use their modding tools or not, its their IP. Bethesda doesn't have to allow any modding stop complaining, especially over small similarities that could be found in their earlier works and other murder mysteries...

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DanGleeSack

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Get a MSI Ghost and save yourself the trouble... Cheaper, more powerful, good thermals, decent battery life and noise.

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DanGleeSack

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MSI ghost pro. Better in every way and thermals are fine. Played games like dying light and fallout 4 no problem. Works great for FL Studio, coding, and autocad too.

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DanGleeSack

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@gameroutlawzz: Download intel extreme tuning utility and MSI afterburner. They let you monitor temp, overclock, and control fan speed.

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DanGleeSack

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@Johny_47 It is for people new to the series, without the DLC, or people with consoles mainly. Metro 2033 redux is where they put most of their effort to make it closer to Last Light so you can play a more continous story with the same quality. They also offer %50 if you own the normal version of it. Buy it, don't it, its up to you; even they said vote with your wallet. It is also a way to support the devs for their great games.


http://www.vg247.com/2013/05/16/metro-last-light-dev-worked-without-power-heat-or-proper-furniture/

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DanGleeSack

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@vadagar1 @DanGleeSack @GarGx1 @septicad On a basic basic level sure it is very plausible that everything is the same. Reality is subjective yes, but when you seem to have the same experiences as most of the people around you, you can formulate what normality is. When you look at higher level systems, we are clearly not one thing though.

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DanGleeSack

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@Dannystaples14 @Kinthalis I somewhat agree with what you are saying. Math is a system we use to convey the theories we find. It doesn't create the theories, but they integrate the theories into our logical framework. Math is the language of science, what good is a theory if you can't communicate or substantiate it. Science looks for both the why and how, one is almost useless without the other. I'm pursuing a degree in both engineering and physics, so I have experience with both the practical and theoretical side of science along with the math to communicate it. There shouldn't be a fight between physicists, mathematicians, or engineers; we all play a part in discovering and creating.


Yes there are many times in physics/engineering/chem where you use watered down theories because the math gets very complicated/impossible or you use very specific conditions/limits. I would take this in that our theories need to be tweaked, because they don't apply to every situation possible in that framework and the math helps us discover these caveats when it doesn't work. These caveats let us find new natural laws (or at least what we can figure at the time). It is part of our learning process, we do the best we can with what is at our disposal. You need to go through theories and math to find what works and what doesn't; you can't expect to find definite universal answers. At the very least you need math to set limits and create tolerances.




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DanGleeSack

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@Tranula That's what the engineers are for :)

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DanGleeSack

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@sethfrost Yeah I didn't expect too much either lol, but I think they did a fairly good job of explaining it without getting over/under complication. That's interesting, I'm pursuing my undergrad in engineering with a concentration in EE with a dual degree in physics. I'm guessing you're either in academics or research with a PHD? I'm trying to figure out if it is worth the extra year to pursue the physics degree, opposed to an industry job with engineering. Just wondering your experience with it.

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DanGleeSack

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@Shelledfade1 Not at all. Maybe for gaming, but it holds huge promise for research application and modeling our own neural networks.