The fix is dead simple, no worries.
The fix is dead simple, no worries.
Indeed, I freaking love GNOME’s UX/UI. But I switched to KDE for Wayland gaming.
It’s a controller with Xbox layout and DualSense features. If you look at Valve’s latest news, Xbox controllers are the most common on PC. So, I guess they want to sell these to those users maybe? Butit doesn’t have hapticfeedback, that’s a bit disappointing.
Personally, I won’t buy anything without trackpads. I want a true Steam Controller 2, the first needed an additional stick and a proper dpad.
I don’t get it. Why would you store all of it? I mean, you can but… why?
Flatpaks are not centralized, Flathub is. You can have your own repo.
That’s cool indeed, thanks.
Cool, ads.
Bottles can’t get any easier, seriously.
Immich got bought by FUTO, how that plays in the long run remains to be seen.
Yeah, that’s what I understood as well. As in, the ISA is the code, and the CPU is the binary.
Obligatory reading: “RISC-V is not an “open-source processor””. I was, like most others, under the impression that RISC-V was an open source CPU. So, this is an important distinction.
Yes, devs work on Linux. Now, since the Deck, people (2%) are starting to game on Linux. The next battlefields are the desktop and the living room. The latter could be solved by a Deck 2 (and a new dock) with E-GPU support. That is trickier, there needs to happen a lot of things, and is much more complex.
People thought the same about portable, yet they did things for it to happen. If a company as inluential as Valve does the same for desktop, it could become a thing. I don’t mean dominate, I mean like a noteworthy event, just like the Deck.
Hi, this looks amazing, I’ll try it ! How is Pocketbase? What are your thoughts working with it?
Also, have you thought about federating trails? It would be amazing we could build a decentralized alternative to the big corps.
They are risking Linux becoming an actual thing in the portable, desktop & living room spaces.
Yeah, I was thinking RISCV. There’s no thing such as libre ARM. Unless he was talking about Libre-friendly which could mean a proprietary SOC company submitting driver code to the kernel.
You mean Libre ARM or Libre-friendly ARM?
Servers and mobile devices completely ignored, disregarding mobile alone represents more devices than desktop. Quite an omission to say the least.