-
Posts
15,086 -
Joined
-
Days Won
2
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Articles
Everything posted by Ghost_MH
-
I get that. In the end, I still get my four fossils a day, so I'm OK with it. The other eggs were really messing with me because I could throw my line in to catch 20 fish and only end up with 5. I could hit a rock hoping to get iron or clay or stone and wind up with half eggs. That one is even more upsetting because it's not like the minerals from stones respawn ten seconds later.
-
Yes, it has. Balloons, fruit, wood, and rocks can all disappear if they hit weeds or there just isn't a clear chunk of land to fall on. I don't think Nintendo changed the spawn rate on sky eggs or earth eggs. There are still always 4 fossils available in your village every day, there's just an additional four or five earth eggs along with them. Those eggs didn't bother me at all. Same with Nook Miles islands. If there's one fossil on that island, there will also be a few earth eggs. Same with sky eggs. You still get two or three balloons a day with regular DIY recipes in them, but you still get an additional four or five bunny balloons. At least those balloons are easy to spot since they're all rainbow. The only eggs that really bothered me are the eggs you get that take away from some other thing you were hoping for. That would be water eggs, wood eggs, and stone eggs. Sky eggs, leaf eggs, and earth eggs are no big deal since they don't reduce the amount of fossils, fruit, or regular balloons you get. I do still miss digging up gyroids, though.
-
Eh, I wouldn't hold it against the local government. We're talking about a Vieques. There are exponentially more views on this thread than there are people living on that island. They were also without power for months, so it's very likely the knowledge of this cache existed only in the memory of the folks who put them in storage. They didn't have networks up to keep track of the dead, let alone medical supplies. After some time and a series of earthquakes later, I can easily see this getting forgotten until a huge need like COVID-19 comes up.
-
That's why organizers need to select the mute on entry option.
-
That's why you don't actually have to enter the meeting password with Zoom to get in. The meeting organizer can just admit people they know should be in the meeting. You can just skip that and not have to wait for the organizer of you know how to enter the password.
-
People can only listen in if you use the same meeting ID over and over again and you don't secure your meetings with a password. Do both or either of those things and it's no longer an issue. The issue is more than Zoom uses a ten digit number for meetings. If you used the same one over and over again and it gets out, either by email leak or random guess, then people can jump into your meetings and listen in. To prevent this you can either use a randomized meeting ID or just put a password on your meeting. I always use random meeting IDs with a password, so this isn't much if a problem for me.
-
I hadn't thought about that one. I could see a user joining something like a yoga class and then sending a malicious link if chat is allowed in this online classes. Yeah, don't click on links.
-
That's the kind of thing I was wondering about. I know Zoom is incredibly popular on the corporate/nonprofit/educational side of things, but I didn't know if people are actually trying to set up Zoom accounts for their own personal use. Go figure. I actually didn't realize there was a free tier of Zoom that supported 100 damn participants.
-
I mean, yeah. Still, who are people having Zoom meetings with that they have to worry about malicious UNC paths? Even if you're using your company's Zoom account to video chat with a bunch of friends and family, it's still friends and family. Eh...I guess it's more a theoretical worry than something we're actually seeing in the wild. That doesn't really count. Schools are still just using enterprise software at educational license pricing.
-
Are people using Zoom outside of corporate settings?