

Just in time to ride the hype wave. Maybe they’ll release a MOBA next.
Just in time to ride the hype wave. Maybe they’ll release a MOBA next.
Let’s Encrypt has done so much for encouraging the spread of HTTPS and good certificate practices. If they went away, I honestly think a good chunk of the internet would start breaking after ~6 months.
This really sucks. I honestly didn’t know the Feds gave so much money to FOSS, but I looked up the USAGM and that makes sense.
It tracks with current trends. Basically anything that could be interpreted as benefiting any county other than the United States or any demographic other than rich white men is getting funding cut. What an embarrassment.
At a time when decentralizing information is critical, our tools to do so are also threatened.
Configurations behind a reverse proxy that did not explicitly configure trusted proxies will not work after this release. This was never a supported configuration, so please ensure you correct your configuration before upgrading. See the updated docs here for more information.
Well I’m glad I read that before upgrading!
Just a snippet from a bigger function.
let comment: String = String::from(“lol”);
println!(“{}”, comment);
For your use case, building from source might be more practical.
Why the hell do you only have 8GB? Are you trying to install flatpaks on a smart fridge?
Anecdotally, I’ve had way more audio issues in Windows than I’ve had in Linux.
Linux audio setups don’t always work out-of-the-box, and sometimes require a bit more configuration, but once you get them set up the way you like, they stay that way.
Windows audio configuration is flaky as hell. It’s constantly changing with updates, and I’ve had so many issues with drivers just silently failing. It seems to have the most trouble with discrete sound cards and USB audio interfaces. I can’t tell you how many Discord and Teams calls I’ve had in Windows where the first 5 minutes is re-configuring audio settings that didn’t stick. This is basically a non-issue in my Linux setups.
macOS audio is probably the best combination of easy to configure and it works consistently. The biggest downside is that you need a lot of 3rd party software to do anything more advanced than setting a single device and volume for the entire system.
Note: I primarily use pipewire now. I used to have more problems back when I used pulseaudio.
Weren’t these released for free a few years ago? Now they’re trying to sell them again?
EDIT: Apparently that was a temporary promotional deal on Origin with the release of The Sims 4.
It sucks to see they were suffering from success. That kind of pressure can destroy your creative energy.
I wish them both the best and I hope they go on to fulfilling projects.
I assume this means they hired more entry-level positions?
Nice to see native Linux support and not just relying on Proton to do the work.
I love Proton so much, but it’s so good it’s enabled many devs to not bother with native Linux ports.
Read the latest reviews and you’ll hear differently.
This latest generation of ARC GPUs is very promising. I’m really glad there’s finally some good budget gaming GPUs out there. Intel has really committed to this product line, and I really hope it continues to pay off.
The price/performance is fantastic, the power efficiency is decent, and the feature set is way beyond expectations–almost caught up with Nvidia on their second attempt. The rate of improvement is impressive.
I have some friends still on GTX 10 series cards that would love this upgrade. That being said, personally, there’s no reason for me to switch yet. As soon as Intel has something that can beat an RTX 3080Ti via higher tiers or next gen, I’ll gladly ditch Nvidia.
Think Different Freely.
When you install Windows, you don’t really control your computer. Microsoft does.
.tar.gz should be appimage.