Leo Laporte hosts the weekly podcast This Week in Tech (TWiT). The podcast … Read Full Bio ↴Leo Laporte hosts the weekly podcast This Week in Tech (TWiT). The podcast focuses on technology and discusses information from across the web. In 2005, this podcast earned the Podcast Award for most listened to. Guests change from week to week, but regular guests include John C. Dvorak, Kevin Rose, Alex Lindsay, and Patrick Norton.
TWiT listeners are usually called the TWiT army. The music for the show was composed by Mark Blasco and the TWiT logo was designed by Dorothy Yamamoto.
TWiT listeners are usually called the TWiT army. The music for the show was composed by Mark Blasco and the TWiT logo was designed by Dorothy Yamamoto.
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TWiT 183: Pirates' Circus
Leo Laporte and the TWiTs Lyrics
No lyrics text found for this track.
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
@Seductiveduckling
when the world needed him most, he returned
@CielMC
HE IS BACK!
@darknessinc.5360
Yo Man, what were you up to until now?You were gone
@FoxerTails
Man, I wish Jon was able to reach out to you for clarification. He has been posting on YouTube so he is around.
@MProductionsGAMING
Thing is, I made this video some time ago, before he was active on his accounts. After I finalized my video, when I did my every-once-in-a-while check up on my Twitter, I saw his old posts on my timeline. It turns out he was active again during my time editing the video (I had stopped checking up on him/his colleagues/company correspondence at the time). However, by the time I realized this, he was already back to being inactive again, so I was too late to try to get ahold of him! Just missed each other by chance unfortunately!
Whenever I get the chance the speak to him or any of his colleagues that knew the inner workings of the game, I'd love to talk with them to help clarify some things, and possibly make a short Part 2 out of it! But there's always a time and place for everything, and I'm in no rush. So I do not wish to bother them.
@user-vn7ce5ig1z
How would they even perform the laser-cut anyway? They'd need some way to orient the circular disc while knowing where the data is and how it's layed out on the disk, but I've never heard of any such mechanism. I once even tried to find out how to map the logical data of a CD to its physical location, but nobody could suggest a solution. đ
@ls190v2
Issues with a pirated copy:
Blunt sword (half damage)
Missing platform (stuck in cave)
Unusable dark magic (cheats do not function)
Phase through ground (no collision beyond impossible level)
Something kinda related:
Impossible anti-piracy claim (expensive laser-cutters)