Tag: locked
Resident Evil 4 – Locked Drawers And Small Keys Guide
Resident Evil 4 has many valuable items that you can sell to earn pesetas. While some are out in the open, others will require a bit more work, such as Locked Drawers. You might see one early on in the Village Square, which you won’t be open until you find a Small Key. Here’s our Resident Evil 4 Locked Drawers and Small Keys guide to help you find them in the campaign. Likewise, you can learn more in our Treasures and Gemstones hub.
Resident Evil 4 Locked Drawers and Small Keys guide
As mentioned above, the Resident Evil 4 Locked Drawers each require a Small Key so they can be opened (each key will be discarded upon a single use). Moreover, as there are times when you’ll only obtain a key later in your run, you might need to backtrack to see if you missed out on a reward.
Locked Drawer locations
Village:
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Discord’s themes are locked behind its $10 per month Nitro subscription
Discord is finally giving you the power to customize its desktop app’s interface with various themes for its latest beta test. The messaging app has introduced Themes — one of its most requested features — with 16 pre-made options to choose from. The not-so-good news? You’ll only be able to apply them if you’re paying for Nitro, its most expensive subscription option.
Nitro does have other perks, including a bigger file-sharing limit, 4K and 60fps streaming, as well as the ability to send messages up to 4,000 characters in length. But if you don’t really need any of them, it’s a matter of deciding whether it’s worth paying $10 a month or $100 a year for the subscription tier just to be able to access Discord’s themes.
In case you have been waiting for the feature to drop and do decide to pay for Nitro, you can choose from the available color schemes by going to Appearance under Settings. You’ll now see a new Color section under the existing Light and Dark themes, where you can find the main 16 choices. There’s apparently another hidden color scheme you can see when you click on the Preview Themes button to test out each option before applying one. Thankfully, Discord is allowing you to use the preview button even if you don’t have an existing Nitro subscription, so you can at least check out what’s available before you make a purchase.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/discord-themes-nitro-subscription-100135630.html?src=rss
John Wick: Chapter 5 Is Neither Locked Nor Loaded
When John Wick: Chapter 4 comes out on March 23, you might want to savor it. Stuntman-turned-director Chad Stahelski says he and star Keanu Reeves are “done for the moment” bringing the trigger-happy misadventures of the assassin to movie theaters.
Dead Island 2’s Hell-A is a city of locked doors that made me furious
I was going to do this as a sidebar in my larger article previewing Dead Island 2, but then I realised it would be a sidebar of about 800 words, which is not a sidebar Alice, for God’s sake, pull yourself together. Dead Island 2 is set in LA, known as HellA as a little play on words, because it’s full of zombies now. Your job is to smash a lot of them to pieces with a hammer, like so many sausages and balloons full of blood held together by sellotape. In the course of this, you find yourself merrily looting your way through the homes of the rich and famous, stuffing as many screws and bits of scrap metal into your pants as the elastic can handle (I assume; none of the player character options has a backpack). Notable among things I couldn’t find when I went looking for them: the bastard keys.
With SVB locked up, how are startups going to pay for stuff?
Things are tough right now. With their funds locked up, many startups won’t be able to make full payroll for a two-week period on $250,000.
With SVB locked up, how are startups going to pay for stuff? by Alex Wilhelm originally published on TechCrunch
How I Got Locked Into an Insane $1000 Race With My Own Son – CNET
Elon Musk locked his Twitter account and went private. Here’s why.
Have you noticed that some of your favorite Twitter users locked their accounts over the past day or two?
Perhaps the most obvious case of a Twitter user that went private recently is none other than the platform’s owner, Elon Musk. With more than 127 million followers, Musk didn’t exactly go private in order to hide his tweets from the public.
Credit: Mashable Screenshot
No, Musk locked his account to test if the Twitter algorithm has gone awry. Here’s what’s happening.
Over the past month or so, many Twitter users have noticed a stark change in their Twitter feeds. Shortly after Musk took over, users began seeing all sorts of random tweets filling up their For You feeds from accounts they weren’t following or had never interacted with. Musk himself acknowledged the issue and chalked it up to an algorithm update which had been fixed.
However, prominent users – especially those within right wing circles and in Musk’s Twitter orbit – continued to complain that their engagement was way down due to the algorithm change.
Word began to spread that users were seeing more engagement, such as likes and retweets, when they had locked their accounts, which essentially makes their tweets private and only visible to their current followers. Normally, an account would see less engagement when going private as doing this essentially blocks users from being able to retweet your posts.
On Tuesday, one of Elon Musk’s favorite right wing Twitter users, Ian Miles Cheong, reported that he had experienced an engagement boost when testing this theory out himself. Cheong showed two similar tweets and their engagement within a back-to-back 5 minute period. The tweet that was sent when Cheong was locked received five times as many likes.
This test seemed to officially put the issue on Musk’s radar.
“Wow, this is extremely concerning,” Musk tweeted in reply to Cheong.
By early Wednesday morning, Musk locked his own Twitter account.
Users who were not following Musk already were confused as to why they could no longer view his tweets. Normally, a Twitter user would lock their usually-public account when some negative story or news about them was on the horizon. Some speculated if that was the case. But, if you have hundreds of millions of followers, it’s not like you can really go into hiding by going private.
Musk sent out a tweet, however, explaining that he was testing this theory that there is some algorithmic quirk prioritizing tweets from locked accounts.
Credit: Mashable Screenshot
“Made my account private until tomorrow morning to test whether you see my private tweets more than my public ones,” he explained.
There are a few bizarre things about Musk’s public test.
For one, his testing sample is apparently of one user, himself. Engagement and reach ebbs and flows based on an assortment of various issues at any given time. Sometimes content just gets more engagement based on the time that it’s posted or what else is going on that day on the platform. It’s unlikely that one user’s experience will get to the bottom of the issue if there is one.
Another issue is that Musk owns the platform. He has access to Twitter’s code and its developers. Those developers have tools (one would hope) that can very well reverse engineer the issue and figure out what changes were made over the past month that contributed to this problem. Musk locking his account is unnecessary and melodramatic.
Users across the board, politically left and right, as well as those who never tweet about politics, have been complaining about these issues. Regardless of what Musk finds in the test with his own personal account, Twitter’s recommendation algorithm has clearly changed for the worse under his leadership.