If you tighten just one side, it can pull the connector in that direction. Think of tightening heatsink screws unevenly on each side.
If you tighten just one side, it can pull the connector in that direction. Think of tightening heatsink screws unevenly on each side.
I don’t think you’d remember a break up from hundreds of years ago, let alone be upset about it.
Maybe if you use Proton VPN on KDE it could need to pull in some Gnome packages. Which isn’t a problem. I use Proton VPN on KDE but I just install it from flathub to keep it simple, so I couldn’t say for sure.
I ran Bazzite on a mini form factor pc for about 12 months. It was just connected to the TV and used to play games.
I turned it on, I used my controller to start a game, that was it. I’m not sure what actions would be doing to break it.
I haven’t used it in about 6 months since I got a steam deck, but I just plugged it in and tried it again. Still starts up fine, played dead cells for a few minutes.
But if you’re looking for immutable distro for gaming then Bazzite is the gold standard.
Other immutable distros like Kinoite, Aurora, Aeon are targeted to desktop use, but in my experience they play games just fine too, no reason they wouldn’t (Aeon used to have a weird security policy that caused problems with Wine, but I think they changed that)
It should work I believe. used it on Opensuse tumbleweed, Fedora, bazzite, and CachyOS. Just by turning Bluetooth on and pairing it.
I was confused, but I think they might be asking why Veracrypt isn’t available as a flatpak
Yes, horror manga. I read it every year around this time.
It’s not really a fact, but some people might have the opinion that the manga made spirals creepy.
I’ve only owned two cars. So the worst by default was a 1987 Ford Laser I owned in 2003.
It was the “Ghia” model. So central locking, sun roof. My uncle had modified the wheels, steering wheel, carbon shifter.
I actually loved it and it handled so well on gravel roads. But eventually the cv joints went, repaired, they went again, leaving me stranded 30km out of the nearest town.
Their existence is a waste of time. If I wanted to but a Big Mac, I’ll go and fucking buy one. No ad is going to make me do that.
During the pandemic I was trying to buy a new car since I’d moved further away from my job and needed one for the first tune in years. So many car ads, but every dealership I called “oh, we won’t have stock for another 6-8 months”. Well then stop advertising your cars!
And just generally; I know products exist. I’m aware that I can but a product to clean windows. Seeing your ad isn’t making me go “wow, clean windows, there’s a thought!” For fucks sake.
Ads are one thing that really pisses me off.
I’m hoping (but not feeling very hopeful) that this could get any racing wheel going under some generic driver.
I have a Fanatec Porsche GT3 racing wheel that I bought in 2011. But switched my main desktop PC to Linux a few months later, so it’s just been sitting in a box since then.
It’s a very nice wheel.
Some furniture wax. And I still use it, I just bought two more tins.
No, but they do love grindcore as well.
Post-hardcore. Typically 90’s old school like Fugazi and Hot Water Music, and then especially 2010s style “the wave” Touché Amore and La Dispute.
Not the 2000s style that veered into emo and Metalcore territory. Although there were some fantastic bands around that time that experimented with the classic sound, like Thrice and At The Drive In, and an obviously earlier example of that being Refused.
The combination of hardcore punk with slow and mid tempo breaks, throw in spoken sections or poetry. If it’s done right it’s just beautiful and makes you feel everything.
But if it’s done wrong, it’s so bad, don’t even bother. Honestly, for me, there’s so many 2000s-era bands that are unlistenable, and to me don’t even fit the genre as far as what came before and after them. But everything changes and people experiment with different sounds.
And it’s such a flexible genre, you have bands that take post-hardcore sensibility and turn it into indie rock, like Manchester Orchestra.
I was going to mention camscanner, but it’s been years since I was in the android phone, so I wasn’t sure if it’s even still around.
I assumed from the start this would be the issue. The mention of it happening to non-Steam games is the giveaway -
Steam provides pre-compiled shaders for the games they supply, non-Steam games have to build up their shader cache whilst you play.
Automatic updates are there with the right distro. Which highlights the need to look around for the right distro for the use case.
Example being Opensuse Aeon - automatic updates - doesn’t even tell you it’s happening, just pops up “your system was updated” out of nowhere
Automatic rollback - if an update broke something you would never know, at boot the system will pick the previous snapshot with no user intervention
As far as the user is concerned you just have a working system; that it is the entire goal of that distro
The standard you walk past is the standard you accept