

Pan
834 posts





What if Microsoft designed YouTube?




4 months. 2 custom plugins. 66 parameters. the most advanced audio tune i've ever made. rebuilt the entire BO7 audio chain from scratch. free on github, or one click with the app. fuck it, here's 12 minutes of the new tune. judge for yourself. full video + links below.









Introducing Iron Gauntlet [Beta], a competitive mode debuting in Call of Duty: #Warzone on March 5. 👥 Duos 🛡️ Rebalanced health 💰 Tougher economy 🚫 No free Loadouts ⭕ Faster gas circles It all comes down to you and the squad member you trust most. Good luck. Link: callofduty.com/patchnotes/202…











At a Home Depot, a shopper browsing the clearance aisle spots several items originally priced at $150 marked down to $0.01. Curious, he takes four of them to self-checkout and scans them, each rings up for a penny. As he’s finishing, an employee rushes over and says he needs manager approval before purchasing. She walks away to get one. While she’s gone, he completes the transaction and pays. When she returns, she scolds him and tries to take the items back. Police are eventually called. After reviewing the receipt and rescanning the items, officers tell him the price stands and he’s free to leave with his purchase. It’s a tough balance between honoring posted prices and preventing system errors from costing businesses thousands. At the same time, once a transaction is completed legally, it becomes a matter of policy and fairness. Situations like this show how important clear pricing rules and calm communication, really are. If a store’s system rings something up at a penny, is the customer entitled to it, or does the store have the right to correct what may be a pricing mistake?


