

The fuck is “non-tariff cheating” supposed to mean?
The fuck is “non-tariff cheating” supposed to mean?
I don’t know why, somehow it just feels different to me. Or maybe it’s just the state of the world that tries to dehumanize everything with “AI” that depress me.
Just the thought of sex robots depressed me even more than the state of the world already had.
It’s like regular Fedora KDE, except that it avoids this problem of traces of past experiments everywhere.
Kinoite is much more than that: it is an atomic and immutable spin of Fedora KDE. This has big implications but the gist of it is that:
You can roll back to any previous version if anything breaks
The base system cannot be modified
If you need to install RPM packages, you do that by adding “layers” on top of the base system, and these can be removed if needed to go back to a clean base system
You can switch from one spin to another by “rebasing”, but it is recommended that you remove any additional layer first and that you stick to the same desktop environment
My experience on other distros was that upgrading in place a system that deviated too much from “stock” would wreck the install. I would personally play it safe and backup my home folder and do a fresh install.
Just don’t forget to test your backup before formatting your drive!
I had a blast playing Overcooked 1 & 2 with my partner and they run fine on Deck. I only played with 4 players once and it was a bit chaotic since it was the first time playing Overcooked for most of us.
If you plan on emulating Wii U, New Super Mario Bros. U sounds like a fun option. In the same vein, Rayman Origins and Legends are great co-op platformers too and are both Gold on ProtonDB
Android has always been developed in a closed-source manner by Google engineers, the recent changes only reduces the visibility of ongoing changes and the ability for developers outside of OEMs to contribute to Android (such contributions were already rare).
This is explained further in this article:
While some OS components, such as Android’s Bluetooth stack, are developed publicly in the AOSP branch, most components, including the core Android OS framework, are developed privately within Google’s internal branch. Google confirmed to Android Authority that it will soon shift all Android OS development to its internal branch, a change intended to streamline its development process.
Do it! Do it! Do it!
I was going to play the first one on PS3 before playing through Part II, but if the Collection comes out on PC before then, I might buy it and play both games on PC instead.
Nope, using Proton-GE 9.27 doesn’t fix the issue, I have the same behavior :(
Now that you speak of it, I have The Sims 4 running without issue using Lutris and I believe it might use GE-Proton.
Most likely they use a translation layer (think Wine, Proton or DXVK) rather than emulation, since the Switch 2 hardware is not completely different from Switch 1 and it’s not as costly as emulation, so I would say neither.
Edit to clarify emulation vs translation layer:
Emulation re-creates the entire hardware, while translation layer translates programming instructions intended for one platform to another, just like you would translate “one plus two” from English into “um mais dois” in Portuguese for exemple.
Since both Switch don’t have completely different hardware (unlike PS3 and PS4 for example) it’s probably easier and much more efficient to simply translate instructions that were specific to Switch 1 into Switch 2 instructions.
Edit 2: also Yuzu and Ryujinx are designed to emulate Switch on the x86 architecture, and since Switch 2 (and Switch 1) run on ARM, I’m pretty sure these emulators wouldn’t run on Switch 2 without massive re-engineering efforts. Also, as someone else said, these projects are reverse-engineered, it makes much more sense that Nintendo engineers create an emulator from scratch using their own internal documentation of Switch 1 architecture (again, it’s unlikely they went for emulation as I stated above) so the result is much more reliable than both Yuzu and Ryujinx.
That sentence intrigues me
we did something that’s somewhere in between a software emulator and hardware compatibility
What do they emulate vs. what was added in hardware to ensure compatibility?
Dommage que !paslegorafi@jlai.lu soit verrouillé
Toute la droitosphère s’insurge, c’est bon signe haha
Par contre invitée au JT de TF1, on laisse la parole aux voyous maintenant ?
I find their enterprise laptops to be surprisingly good. I own a refurbished EliteBook and it has really nice keyboard and track pad as well as user-replaceable RAM, SSD and wireless card. My only issue is that most of their enterprise laptops come with screens with 45% support of sRGB, which is trash for web design and photo editing.
Looks like someone at Amazon refunded every product which title contains “lens”, “filter” and/or “binocular” that were bought recently out of an abundance of caution.
I might be lucky, my Gen 1 Pebble still works (though I have not tested how long the battery lasts in use, I only know it stayed on for under a week idle).
Only restic snapshots are backed-up to B2. ZFS snapshots are for undoing mistakes, though I enabled them recently and I have yet to use them.
Oh, that makes sense.