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老牌开源项目硬塞AI代码,核心贡献者“暴走”分叉、怒怼创始人:“祝你玩得开心,一个人慢慢敲代码吧”
3 6 Ke· 2025-10-21 07:23
Core Viewpoint - The introduction of AI-generated code into the GZDoom project has led to significant backlash within the open-source community, resulting in a split and the creation of a new branch called UZDoom due to dissatisfaction with the leadership style of the project's maintainer, Christoph Oelckers [1][5][14]. Group 1: Background of GZDoom - GZDoom is a notable derivative of the ZDoom project, which modernizes the classic game Doom by adding advanced features such as OpenGL hardware acceleration, dynamic lighting, and support for complex modding [3][4]. - The project has become a mainstream platform for Doom mod development, with many popular modern projects built on GZDoom [4]. Group 2: Community Reaction to AI Code - The controversy began when Oelckers merged AI-generated code into the GZDoom project without testing, leading to frustration among long-time contributors who felt the project was being treated as a personal endeavor rather than a collaborative effort [1][6][7]. - A specific comment left in the code referencing ChatGPT sparked further outrage, as contributors raised concerns about the untested nature of the code and potential copyright issues [7][8]. Group 3: Formation of UZDoom - In response to the dissatisfaction with Oelckers' management style and the use of AI-generated code, a group of developers formed UZDoom, aiming to maintain the core principles of GZDoom while fostering a more collaborative and transparent development process [6][14][15]. - UZDoom will ensure that all code changes go through a pull request process, requiring multiple reviews before being merged into the main branch, contrasting with the previous management approach [15][12]. Group 4: Ongoing Community Discontent - The community's discontent has been vocal, with developers criticizing Oelckers for his dismissive attitude towards concerns about AI-generated code and his unilateral decision-making [17][16]. - The situation highlights the tension between the use of AI in coding and the traditional collaborative ethos of open-source projects, raising questions about the future of such projects when faced with similar challenges [17][10].
Tiny Game Boys you can actually play? It's the $50 Thumby Color and $30 Thumby. #TITW
The Verge· 2025-07-31 14:01
This tiny Game Boy plays Doom for real. There's a Tiny Game Boy Advance, too. Today, I'm toying with the Thumby and Thumpy Color from the makers of the Tiny TV.They don't play Nintendo games, unless you count knockoff Zelda, but there's Tetris and Connect 4 and Mind Sweeper and Doom and Flappy Bird and Bustamov. There's Solitaire in 2048 and whatever else you want to code and upload right in a browser window. Both thumbies have Raspberry Pi Pico processors inside, but the color is more powerful with an RP23 ...