I'm not agreeing with you, but that was pretty damn funny.Try calculating how much monetary value (x) you give to your toilet every day.

I'm not agreeing with you, but that was pretty damn funny.Try calculating how much monetary value (x) you give to your toilet every day.
Try calculating how much monetary value (x) you give to your toilet every day.
LoL. Actually that monetary value may become substantial in the coming years. People have been using it as an energy source for thousands of years. Now, in the search for alternate sources of energy, industrial nations are looking at a variety of methods to harvest human waste and convert it back to energy. We pay a great deal of money and energy to safely dispose of it. Turns out there are already potentially cost effective ways to convert toilet contributions into energy.I'm not agreeing with you, but that was pretty damn funny.![]()
Yep lots of lipids to make use of.I suppose that makes sense. There is quite a bit of unburnt carbohydrate in our solid waste.
lol at off topicness.
Your personal monetary value of 'x', registering steam? You giving the monetary value of this imaginary 'x' to Valve? Try calculating how much monetary value (x) you give to your toilet every day. Damn those companies that produce toilets!
If you value your precious seconds so, why the hell are you even playing games? Stop it before the economy crumbles! Or even better, stop arguing pointless things and save that precious time for registering steam once.
These threads are getting crazier with the minute.
Valve has said they can unlock any game for non-activation gameplay if it ever stops being supported.
This has probably been brought up already, but I'll ask it.
My laptop is a couple years old. I figure I'll probably replace it within another three years.
In the meantime, let's assume Steam goes defunct. I get my new computer, and I attempt to install Civ V. Steam is loaded onto my computer. It attempts to go online to contact the server. The server isn't there any more. It's unable to verify the program.
Will Civ V still install? Or is this giving Civ V a "planned obsolescence"? Because I don't buy many computer games any more (too many betas sold as if they were complete and never fully patched--I'm looking at you, MOO3 and MAX 2!), so the games I want to play, I want to play for a decade or more.
I am unwilling to leave myself at the mercy of a third party. I know, DirectX is a third-party product. But it doesn't require me to go online to connect to their website, which may someday no longer be there--it's on the disc, after all.
....If Valve went bust presumably steam would be sold off to another company by bankruptcy court, and if not, Valve has already said they have prepared a patch that would disable steam's DRM, that they have it ready and waiting in the event it's ever needed.
Steam Subscriber Agreement said:....C. NO GUARANTEES.
VALVE DOES NOT GUARANTEE CONTINUOUS, ERROR-FREE, VIRUS-FREE OR SECURE OPERATION AND ACCESS TO STEAM, THE STEAM SOFTWARE, YOUR ACCOUNT AND/OR YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONS(S).....
Who are you, some guru stock analyst? Or have you prescience to see the future? Even an educated and well founded projection is nothing more than a guess. I can see a wide variety of events that sees Steam defunct within a decade. Changing technology, increasing energy costs coupled with increasing server demands, increasing net congestion leading to loss of net neutrality (ISP's blocking bandwidth hogs such as Steam), competitors charging less and doing better, the DOJ schooling Steam for monopoly (Apples iTunes is dealing with this right now, Steams headed in a similar direction, even Gabe himself has commented on this), change of Steam leadership, rapid growth not being balanced with infrastructure investment, and more.As has been said before, the chance of the steam servers going offline at any point in the foreseeable future is extremely slim, and even then, the companies who released the games via Steam will be perfectly able to release a patch to detach their game from the platform if they needed to.
Based on my history, the odds of me losing my CD/DVD's are nil.The odds of steam going defunct in a way that leaves you unable to play your games is smaller than the odds that you will lose all your DVD's.
If Valve went bust presumably steam would be sold off to another company by bankruptcy court, and if not, Valve has already said they have prepared a patch that would disable steam's DRM, that they have it ready and waiting in the event it's ever needed.
Who are you, some guru stock analyst? Or have you prescience to see the future? Even an educated and well founded projection is nothing more than a guess. I can see a wide variety of events that sees Steam defunct within a decade. Changing technology, increasing energy costs coupled with increasing server demands, increasing net congestion leading to loss of net neutrality (ISP's blocking bandwidth hogs such as Steam), competitors charging less and doing better, the DOJ schooling Steam for monopoly (Apples iTunes is dealing with this right now, Steams headed in a similar direction, even Gabe himself has commented on this), change of Steam leadership, rapid growth not being balanced with infrastructure investment, and more.
Please provide a link from Steam that says they WILL provide a patch to disable a games DRM should the need arise. Don't bother with the links that say its potentially possible. That is no commitment. But even a commitment is not a contract with consequences. But it would be something. Even more would be a commitment by 2k as well as Firaxis. I might withdraw my concerns over product ownership of internet validated media if the publisher, developer, and distributer all commit to providing a fail safe allowing me to play the game independant of the decisions and finacial health of the distributer.
A lack of guarantee does not mean that they wouldn't attempt to do so.
There is no guarantees, but I'm sure there's a quote somewhere of a Valve employee stating that should they go under they will patch the drm out of it, or something along those lines.
Gabe Newell, CEO of Valve, said in a post on the Steam User Forums that "Unless there was some situation I don't understand, we would presumably disable authentication before any event that would preclude the authentication servers from being available." He added, "We've tested disabling authentication and it works."
There was a quote from a Valve employee some years ago, but it seems it has been purged in their forums due to age.
Anyway, when they go bankrupt which is highly unlikely since they're damn successful, everyone will be tripping over eachother trying to buy it over. Also if you mean in 15 years or so, by then it'll be trivial to run them on an emulator in your organic computer.
Now, let's go back to asking why it still connects in offline-modus, then we'll get to the EULA once more, after that that registering is hard, and then we can discuss this once more. Tempo, people!
Anyway, when they go bankrupt which is highly unlikely since they're damn successful, everyone will be tripping over eachother trying to buy it over.
Hearsay, opinion, unsubstantiated gossip, etc., mean absolutely nothing. I provided a reliable source, the Steam Subscriber Agreement. You furnished nothing but empty words.