

Lame, I knew they were out there but I guess I’m lucky I haven’t witnessed anything that blatant yet.
Lame, I knew they were out there but I guess I’m lucky I haven’t witnessed anything that blatant yet.
I’ve played a bunch of Deadlock but I haven’t suspected anyone of cheating yet, what are you seeing?
Yeah, I wish the PC corporation that makes all of our PCs would stop paying devs to make their games PC exclusive all the time.
Horrendous take.
I just add the search to firefox and you can get the same functionality without needing to use another site to get to the one you want to search on.
If Netscape had a large paid install base and still failed because a free browser became ubiquitous, what makes you think doing that now when the free browsers are already ubiquitous would work? Especially when it also has to compete with what is essentially already what you’re describing, Librewolf (or just Firefox + Arkenfox).
I would walk around with a kishi shoved up my ass for storage before I would try playing a platformer using that d-pad.
There is no reason for this to exist. You can already just use your phone with similar controllers, except designed by someone who has actually played a video game before.
That’s any recompilation, the game has to be decompiled manually first.
That reddit thread is horrible advice, it’s just mapping the LXC root user to the host root user, which is just a privileged LXC with extra steps (and maybe less secure).
The reason you’re probably having issues is that your root user in the LXC is mapped to the host user 100000 by default, and that user doesn’t have access to the share, but you can change that with mount options or creating a user with 100000:100000 and adding it to a group with access.
Why would it need to be “okayed”? If they’re not providing the files then they’re not infringing on any IP.
Gnome is very functional, it’s just meant to function one very specific way.
This is just a non-VR version of Bigscreen, which has been around for close to a decade (still in beta lol)
I haven’t gotten around to spinning it up yet, but I was just looking into this myself and was going to try out Pinchflat. If anyone has used it and has any feedback I’d love to hear it.
I was between it and Tube Archivist.
This has strong “nobody needs a monitor over 120Hz because the human eye can’t see it” logic. Transparency is completely subjective and people have different perceptions and sensitivities to audio and video compression artifacts. The quality of the hardware playing it back is also going to make a difference, and different setups are going to have a different ceiling for what can be heard.
The vast majority of people are genuinely going to hear zero difference between even 320kbps and a FLAC but that doesn’t mean there actually is zero difference, you’re still losing audio data. Even going from a 24-bit to a 16-bit FLAC can have a perceptible difference.
Nobody “needs” to listen to music over Bluetooth at all, but why not make it sound like it’s supposed to?
I just wish zoho would hide my IP when I use their SMTP. I get that’s how mail headers have always worked but it blows my mind that it’s still standard practice to expose the IP of your mail server or home network.
I mean, Keepass is free open source software so the political views of the developers don’t matter as much.
So is bitwarden, you don’t have to use their servers.
What are you expecting, a pair of glasses?
Me too. I recently switched from an RTX 2080 to a 7900 XTX, which is way more powerful for games, but local LLM performance tanked without CUDA.
You’re sure you wouldn’t rather switch to moonlight: vendor lock-in edition?