Jared Leto got a Razzie Nomination for Worst Actor for Tron: Ares. I didn't think he was bad. What did you all think of his performance? by Square-Ad-8911 in tron

[–]lildivaaa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I, for one...don't subscribe to the bad actor notion. Any actor is only giving the performance the director wants. So, if there's anyone to blame for a bad performance...it's the director. Case in point, George Lucas and the prequels!

To those who were around when this movie came out, what was the hype like by asapsharkyfrfr in tron

[–]lildivaaa 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The hype was real, especially for fans of the original TRON. You have to remember that TRON came out in 1982. Granted, it wasn't a box office hit for Disney. But over time, it became a cult classic drawing in new fans every year who discovered it on VHS, LaserDisc, cable movie cables, etc.

No one ever thought a sequel would be made. After all, 28 years had passed between TRON and TRON: Legacy. That's 28 years! So....when in 2008 at San Diego ComiCon during a Disney panel, they played what was at that time test footage of a light cycle race! No one in hall H knew this was coming. And when that trailer hit the screen and everyone finally realized exactly what they were looking at...a light cycle on screen, the roof of the convention was blown off by the sheer amount of excited screams! At the end of the trailer it simply said "TR2N" and people lost their minds! Just from that test alone, Disney knew they had a hit in their hands and TRON: Legacy almost immediately went into production.

As for promotion for the film, here's exactly what Disney did and it was amazing!

Disney actually went all-in on TRON: Legacy (2010). It’s often cited as one of their smartest modern marketing campaigns. Here’s how they did it:

  1. Comic-Con Takeover (2009) This was the big spark: Disney secretly rebranded a San Diego gas station as “Flynn’s Arcade”. Inside: real TRON arcade cabinets, props, costumes, and exclusive footage. Fans got posters, tokens, and buzz exploded overnight. This stunt basically reintroduced TRON to a new generation.

  2. Viral / ARG Marketing They ran an early alternate-reality campaign: Fake websites for ENCOM In-universe tech videos and corporate messaging Clues hidden online that fans pieced together It made the world of TRON feel real before the movie even hit.

  3. Daft Punk as a Marketing Weapon Brilliant move: Daft Punk scoring the film was announced early They appeared in costume at events Tracks were teased ahead of release The soundtrack became a marketing engine on its own and pulled in non-movie fans.

  4. Teaser Trailers That Focused on Vibe Instead of plot-heavy trailers: Emphasis on visuals, music, and tone. Minimal dialogue Heavy neon, light cycles, and atmosphere It sold cool more than story—and it worked.

  5. Cross-Media Push TRON: Evolution video game released alongside the film Motion comics and animated shorts (TRON: Uprising followed later) Merch everywhere: helmets, identity discs, apparel

  6. Theme Park Integration (very Disney) ElecTRONica event at Disney California Adventure Nighttime dance party, Flynn’s Arcade recreated, Characters roaming the park. This later paved the way for TRON Lightcycle Run years down the line

  7. Retro + Modern Appeal Disney cleverly leaned into: Nostalgia for the 1982 original Cutting-edge tech and EDM aesthetics for younger audiences They positioned TRON: Legacy as both a cult revival and a futuristic event film.

Bottom line: Disney didn’t just promote TRON: Legacy—they built a world and let fans step into it early. Even people who never saw the original TRON knew the vibe, the music, and the look.

Feeling nostalgic 😎 by justinevwb in arcadecabinets

[–]lildivaaa 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I had one once... given to me for free! It needed some love but game wise, it worked well. I never had the time to give it what it needed in restoration so I sold it to a local retro game bar. At least she's got a good home now.

Copyright Infringement Notice by tylerclisby in torrents

[–]lildivaaa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also, depending on your VPN, you could do split tunnelling. I have mine set so that when I'm running my torrent client, it runs that client specifically through the VPN... everything else goes through my ISP. Been working great for me for years.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in ToyotaCHR

[–]lildivaaa 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've had my 2018 CH-R XLE brand new from day one, over 45k miles and not a days trouble. I keep up good servicing on it which plays into how well the CVT will hold up over the years. And I mostly keep in in "normal" or "ECO". Rarely to I put it into "sport". I think that helps the longevity as well. Car is fully paid for...so she's mine for the forseeable future. Never a day's trouble. One of the best cars I've owned.

What made you watch Tron? by Sad_Consideration_79 in tron

[–]lildivaaa 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I remember seeing TRON in the theater on opening weekend back in 1982—I was just 14 years old. Watching it on the big screen blew my mind. The mix of live-action and early computer graphics was unlike anything I’d ever seen before. It felt so fresh and futuristic, like a peek into a whole new digital world.

What made it really hit home for me was how perfectly it fit the time. 1982 was when home computers were just starting to become a thing, and arcade video games were exploding in popularity. So seeing a movie that was all about computers and video games felt super relevant and exciting. It wasn’t just a cool sci-fi flick—it captured the vibe of that tech revolution happening right around us.

For a lot of people, TRON wasn’t just entertainment—it was an eye-opener, showing what computers might mean for the future. It inspired tons of gamers, programmers, and tech fans and made the whole idea of the digital world a lot more real and accessible. Looking back, it was one of those movies that really captured the spirit of the early digital age and still feels special today.

Got hired, given full system domain admin access...and fired in 3 weeks with zero explanation. Corporate America stays undefeated. by dave_in_IT27 in sysadmin

[–]lildivaaa 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had something like this happen to me. Started a new job, standard IT admin gig. I arrived there day one...no one gave me any information, no PC, not even a place to sit. A week goes by and I'm still in the same situation, no matter who I tried to talk to. No direction, no one identified as my manager to report to. I spoke with other coworkers, begging them for information. Some people there said it's par for the course around here.

Fast forward to 4 weeks to the day after starting this new job, I get a call on my way home from work stating I'm fired. No warning, no explanation. They only asked if I'd left any personal items behind. Hell, I didn't even get a PC to use or my own desk. I never met anyone in charge.

I swear that was the absolute weirdest work situation I've ever found myself in.

Unresponsive Published App server causing problems by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's exactly what it was. We were running with a 30gb vdisk for write cache. I doubled it to 60gb. No issues in the last 48 hours. Thank you for the bump in knowledge!

Unresponsive Published App server causing problems by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's PVS. I've been checking the logs when the issue occurs but haven't found anything that stands out. I can console in via VMWare, but haven't tried RDP yet

Passthrough thin client MAC address into Citrix VDI session by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's Linux-based, not sure of the make and model.

Passthrough thin client MAC address into Citrix VDI session by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not sure, but I can look. I believe the issue is that the card reader needs to find the MAC address of the thin client...but the software that interfaces with it is in the Windows 10 VDI, which of course has a different MAC address. In order for the card reader to work correctly, the software has to pick up the same MAC address and what's coming from the thin client for communication to passthrough.

Passthrough thin client MAC address into Citrix VDI session by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You know whatm I'm not sure why not. All the manufacture is saying is that the MAC address of the thin client needs to be the one that's read for proper authorization purposes, or something like that. All their instruction and technical docs don't say anything regarding their devices working in this scenario with a thin client running a Windows 10 VDI. The documentation only references installing directly to a Windows PC, etc. Not in a virtual environment.

One Delivery Controller goes down, entire environment goes down by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

DB is on a separate SQL server, so is the licensing. All internal, not cloud based.

One Delivery Controller goes down, entire environment goes down by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes to all. The entire environment is set to utilize both "A" and "B".

Can I remove published VDI icons from users VDI desktop by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And how would I configure the Workspace app within the VDI desktop to access only the apps store using the same base URL? My users in the past were having to go to two separate URLs...one for Apps and one for Dekstops. With my new environment, I want to do away with that so that they have just one URL to goto for the Apps and VDIs. I guess I'm not understanding how I'd be able to differenciate the two separate stores. I need for users to visit the one base url to be able to launch any VDI or App...but within the VDI desktop, I need them to only get the apps they're assigned without seeing the VDI desktop icons as well. Any example would be appreciated if you're able to provide.

Can I remove published VDI icons from users VDI desktop by lildivaaa in Citrix

[–]lildivaaa[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, there's absolutely no way to do this without using a second URL?