

Cool! I’ve been using Loop Habit Tracker for a few years, and it doesn’t seem as focused on encouragement but just for tracking things. Which works for me.
I like NixOS
Cool! I’ve been using Loop Habit Tracker for a few years, and it doesn’t seem as focused on encouragement but just for tracking things. Which works for me.
Lots of people have been saying they should focus more on developing Firefox rather than doing other things like partnering with Mullvad or whatever. There are already quite a few other fediverse instances.
In D&D it is abbreviated cha, it’s just that rizz sounds more goated and fire.
There’s OpenTracks but idk if that does what you’re looking for.
On Lemmy you can sort by top day in a community, idk if you can open up mastodon hashtags through Lemmy or not
It’s unencrypted, your ISP / Starbucks wifi can read all the files you send. Use SFTP instead.
You mean like nixos-unstable, the rolling release channel of NixOS?
NixOS is great, you can even have it automatically reinstall and wipe your garbage with Impermanence lol
Xorg users trying to use a 144hz Freesync monitor with a 60hz second monitor
I think there’s a Steam Link app now which doesn’t use the physical device, or they might be using Steam Remote Play.
I’m crazy and use REFT to move and middle mouse to reload lol
What I do is have a separate /synced/media/music folder on both my pc and phone, and use syncthing for that and don’t worry about the default Android music folder.
For playlists I do that on my pc with the music player Strawberry, I can add songs to a playlist and save it as a .m3u file in that same /synced/media/music folder. The playlists still work on my phone since it’s just local paths from the root of my music folder. I would do playlists on my phone as well but I use JetAudio which is pretty buggy and doesn’t let me modify .m3u playlists, although I’m sure some other player would let you create and modify them.
You can check community reports on http://protondb.com
I’ve played Starfield and Baldur’s Gate 3 on Linux and both work fine.
It doesn’t really matter which distro you use for gaming, just get one that is popular and well-supported such as Kubuntu or Fedora or Pop!_OS or whatever. Ones like Arch and Gentoo would be pretty complicated so I wouldn’t recommend those until you feel comfortable.
You could try OpenTracks, I used it a few years ago and it was pretty good.
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Nice