I used to have a similar situation, I used Vscode remote development to effectively work from any machine. Another thing I tried was using Nextcloud to watch the working directory, which automatically synchronized files when they change.
I used to have a similar situation, I used Vscode remote development to effectively work from any machine. Another thing I tried was using Nextcloud to watch the working directory, which automatically synchronized files when they change.
Honestly must be incredibly stressful managing a project like the Linux kernel. Governments constantly wanting changes made for their own purposes, companies leeching off the work of volunteers, neck beards losing their minds over some change they don’t like.
I don’t envy them at all. This sort of change was inevitability going to piss people off - it could have been handled better but I think it was going to be lose/lose no matter which way it was done.
Not at his age
Yep. Because windows 95 and 98 exist, and there is a bunch of software which would do a check for the operating system version you were running with something like, if the operating system name starts with “Windows 9” etc
Just a point on Wayland - I have an nvidia GPU and have been on Wayland for a couple months now (KDE Plasma), and its been entirely problem free and I actually forgot I switched from X11 to Wayland.
Blender has support for Wayland now too.
I do a lot of gaming and development - ever since Nvidia made those changes for Wayland support and KDE added that explicit sync stuff its been great. Before all of that though I had heaps of issues with flickering and just general usability.
Wayland actually fixed a number of issues for me, like stuttering when notifications appear, and jankyness in resizing windows.
When people say its not ready, it’s normally some specific use case that worked in X11. So, they’re not wrong, but not right either.
I think last time I ran some portable Windows USB to do that.
Its honestly such a dead game at the moment, as in the world feels super empty and uninteresting. The pathing for the Pals is really bad too - trying to build a multistorey building is basically a nonstarter as they can’t really navigate up stairs.
Based on that you can get costumes/skins for your Pals, I’m pretty sure they’ll go live service with those as micro transactions.
Its an option in Lutris to automatically create a shortcut in your Steam game library for a “Non-Steam game”. But yes, I think you’re right - that’s probably what is happening
It works when I launch through Lutris, but yea - using the Steam shortcut it doesn’t work. I’m sure it all used to work on my old system, but not sure if I’ve tried it since moving to Wayland
It’s definitely something like this - from what I can tell the controller hasn’t moved “focus” to the game as I can still hear the Steam Big Picture menu making noise etc.
Oh man, those car beds are sweet though. Silly cats.
Oh, that ones easy. The developers for Stalker 2 are in Ukraine.
As a TA veteran, I could never get into Planetary Annihilation. Supreme Commander 1 & 2 were pretty good, got lots of hours in those.
Awesome, love to hear it. Good luck
Good question. I suppose the advantage is it’s small scope, and it’s bash only so it’s just using the same commands you’d use if you were to manually be installing Arch. Whether or not you find that an advantage or not is up to you really. The idea behind it was to put minimal thought into the install process and just have a lazy installation script. I found it super handy when spinning up VMs for instance.
Sometimes writing the game engine is just more fun than making the game itself, ok…
For this type of game, performance is really inconsistent. Without even building a mega base etc, sometimes it’ll decide to just start moving as a slide show at like 20 fps. When I first load it it runs nicely at 100fps (with some tuning of the graphics).
Its especially bad if you go into a new town. Sometimes it’ll go fine, but chances are it’ll run like shit until you close the game and reopen it.
(3070ti, 5800X, 32gb ram, nvme drive)
And neither of them make Artificial Intelligence!
Its good that people care enough to keep finding these vulnerabilities