Highest Rated Comments


SomeCallMeWaffles24 karma

Valve will, upon request via help.steampowered.com, issue a refund for any reason, if the request is made within the required return period, and, in the case of games, if the title has been played for less than two hours.

-Steam return policy.

Just my guess. I've read that a few indie games realized there was less than 2 hours worth of play in their game. That resulted in people playing the whole thing then getting a refund. Most devs combat this by adding levels or making things a bit harder so they take longer. This game may be talking a different direction, hoping people will wait out a timer to see what happens.

SomeCallMeWaffles12 karma

When looking for startups to invest in do you look more favorably on projects grounded in catering to existing markets or something unique and original? For instance, would medical office software be a better candidate than a new social media experience?

SomeCallMeWaffles3 karma

I attended a for profit college and got an associates degree at the high price that comes along with such colleges. I graduated about a year and a half ago and just now got a job in my field (web programming). I had a hard time finding a job and ultimately it was networking that won a position.

Now that things are stable I'm thinking about a four year degree. I can't imagine another two years at the same for profit is going to help me much, but I'm pushing 30 and not sure my past academics are up to snuff. I barely passes high school but I got 3.5 in my for profit two year degree.

Am I best off with private collage again, a community college degree that is only tangentially related (all the local school offers), or continued efforts in self improvement and networking?

SomeCallMeWaffles2 karma

For-profit colleges have a reputation that it's hard to over look. Do employers tend to have a negative view on for-profit graduates?