

Same thing with ‘Robux Revenue Per Visit’, or basically any statistic that shows the decimal places. The numbers for ‘Average Visit Length’ feel too long and I think they should be truncated to only show a few decimal places.

Though, I’m not sure if this is a bug or intentional, as it only seems to happen once 5M is visible on the chart, as ‘Robux Revenue’ for me does show 3 000k with Total visible. If you get rid of Total on any of the charts where it goes above 1M, it will no longer show the ‘M’ suffix and instead goes beyond 999K. As always, let us know if you find any bugs in these new features, and let us know if there are any other features you would like added. Hope you all like these updates Check out the new features by visiting /creations and clicking on a game. Like other assets, these link back to their details pages on – for now And you can copy each of their IDs from the context menu. You will now find all of your Badges, Game Passes, and Developer Products under the Associated Items tab. Stay tunedĪnd lastly, introducing… Associated Items
#Just a dash of oops meme download
The superintendent lost her $237,000 job.Next up, you’ll notice the Developer Stats page you know and love has been ported over to the Creator Dashboard It has been updated to match the Creator Dashboard’s styleguide, as well as for mobile support You can now check all of your games statistics and download data on the go We are working to offer more analytics functionality. Did she really think nobody would check the recordings on the suddenly obscured camera and not see her as the last image? So she climbed up on a chair and covered the lens. She was fully aware of the camera that might record her daughter’s presence in the school. Then there was the New Jersey school superintendent last year sidestepped the process and placed her daughter in a job that required board of education approval. He claimed later that he was “re-enacting” the find to document where he found the evidence, but nobody was buying it. Like the Baltimore cop who was recorded allegedly planting evidence against a suspect – by his own body cam. Hey, we all forget we’re on Candid Camera from time to time. Local: Fire destroys Old Tappan home the day after Christmas The recording of the stop revealed nothing but an almost saccharine-sweet cop who even downgraded the offense on the summons so she wouldn’t get points against her license.Ĭameras in New Jersey parking meters?: The 'smart' devices could cause a spike in ticketsĮditorial: Expand public access to police camera tapes She seemed to forget the car might be equipped with a dash cam. A couple days after the stop, she appeared at the police station to file a complaint about all kinds of abusive behavior by the officer. There was a woman who was stopped for running a stop sign in Pequannock a few years ago. Some people do, in fact, dance like nobody is watching.īut frequently somebody is, or has the potential to look back. What is amazing, however, is how people seem to forget-or don’t care-that they are potentially being watched. And while simply being filmed outside your car during such an event by itself might not be evidence of an actual crime, if you are identified and you have $10,000 buried in your backyard, you might get a little nervous. In the frenzy that followed, most people probably didn’t give a thought to the potential of a hundred-plus cameras looking their way. Like a half-million dollars being scattered on Route 3 after the back of an armored truck opened. Wait! He’s talking to the mayonnaise about overthrowing the government!” It’s more about the stored images that can be retrieved after some sort of event. It’s not quite “1984,” in which agents are watching our moment-to-moment activities: “Subject is moving toward refrigerator. The population seems to have largely accepted the fact that we are under surveillance a good part of the day and night. There is a popular inspirational wall hanging and Internet meme that reads, “Dance like nobody is watching!” Good luck with that. Then came dash cams, body cams, wiener dog cams (yes, that’s really a thing).Īnd now just about everyone is equipped with a video camera. It wasn’t that long ago, however, that the cameras were limited to stores, banks and other public places of business. We have lived in the surveillance camera world for some time now. Just ask the people whose obscure image of themselves on Route 3 recently placed them near hundreds of thousands of dollars released into the Jersey swamp. Ever get that feeling somebody is watching you?
