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- #ZOMBIES ATE MY FRIENDS HACKED CODE#
Instead, he says “I suppose I could, but just say out of trouble”, with Evil Gamer responding “Fine, but I’m not making any promises!” What a poorly-written line! If this was a realistic portrayal of Satan, then he would have laughed and roasted his ass. I love how far they have to stand apart so Bores can do the split-screen effect.Įvil Gamer compliments him and then asks if he can return to the world of the living. On cue, the Evil Gamer appears sitting on an invisible force (yeah his green screen cuts out the chair) reading a Nintendo Power (I’m a gamer guys, really!). But his conquest will have to wait because he has a party to attend to. Instead we get Devil Bores declaring his plans for world domination because it’s Halloween. Wow, something that actually makes sense.Ġ:02 - 0:46: The video starts without the theme song, huh.
Intro: The “Rate This Video” card has Bores’ head replaced with a pumpkin. As you can see, it won’t be easy for me to cover this review. This also happens to be the first Irate Game review I saw, hated him the moment he said this game sucks. That’s the important thing, the game was fun. Excellent gameplay, creepy soundtrack, great variety of weapons and monsters, and it’s damn fun. Might as well get through this, this is the Irate Gamers’ Zombies Ate My Neighbors review.
Steven Orvis wrote a comment on Rain Barrel Pump.EDIT: Bores has removed this version (only the remastered version remains).gbrowne liked 20Msps+ ADC RaspberryPi HAT.davedarko has updated the log for im-me messenger - 12 years later.gareth.wood liked Li-ion Battery Quick Charger.
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Reality Bites on Buzzword Bingo Bitcoin Burial Burrowing Blueprint Balked At By Bureaucracy. Posted in Radio Hacks Tagged disaster, emergency communications, ESP32, ESP8266, LoRa, mesh network, radio, wifi Post navigation But well, whether we really care about modern communication and helping each other out when all hell breaks loose instead of just primevally defending our own lives is of course another question. If the idea itself sounds familiar, we did indeed cover similar projects like HELPER and Skrypt earlier this year, showing that LoRa really seems to be a popular go-to for off-grid communication. And while you can built it all by yourself with everything available on ’s GitHub page, a TTGO ESP32 LoRa module will do as well. Admittedly, LoRa may not be your best choice for high data rates, but it is a good choice for long-range communication when cellular networks aren’t an option. The idea is to connect to the network with your mobile phone through WiFi, therefore eliminating any need for additional components to actually use the network, and have the nodes communicate with each other via LoRa. The network itself is built from single nodes comprising of a battery-backed solar panel, a LoRa module, and either the ESP8266 or ESP32 for WiFi connectivity. The folks at tackle exactly this concern with their fully open source, off-grid, solar-powered, LoRa mesh network, Disaster Radio. Just think of natural disasters - an earthquake or hurricane causing a long-term power outage for example. But where are the nerds, and where is all the apocalypse-proof, solar-powered tech? Or is it exactly this lack of tech in those stories that serves as incentive to build it in the first place? Well, maybe it doesn’t have to be the end of the world to seek for ways to cope with a collapse of our modern communication infrastructure either. Well, apart from the whole “the undead roaming the Earth” thing. As popular as the post-apocalyptic Zombie genre is, there is a quite unrealistic component to most of the stories.