It’s not weird. I’d appreciate it if it were me.
Just wonking about on the internet… oh look, a bee.
It’s not weird. I’d appreciate it if it were me.
From what I’ve seen the authors of the papers have listed the zenbleed mitigation impact as “statistically insignificant”.
I imagine Larian care. Especially since they’re pushing Steamdeck support.
The reason this is a “supported platform” issue is that the developers of Hogwarts legacy know their supported platforms support XeSS, so any work that is not “just turn it on” is additional work for no gain.
LinUX iS nOt A sUpPoRrtEd PlaTfOrm
I see that you, like me, always ends up with a few screws left over 😜
3 of us! 3 of us! 3 of us!
I followed the example of the other person on Facebook and did a factory reset. Luckily I have most of my stuff on the SD card but i’m still going to have to set up a bunch of stuff again.
But more to the point, it worked!
I did a fresh install of BG onto deck storage (not SD) just to be sure (which still took forever cause 122GB) but I’m in and playing!
Tried it. Also a whole bunch of other versions incl GE.
Found someone on Facebook with the same problem so at least it’s not just me eh?!
Looks like we’ve both got Cryotools and decky power tools installed so it could be that.
Given I uninstalled it and its huge I cant check that just yet though.
I can’t get it to run past the Nvidia GameWorks logo. Just a straight crash back to SteamUI every time.
I’ve not changed any settings. If it’s deck verified it should just work right?
I just bought an actual domain and use that 😅
As an added bonus, letsencrypt works with no effort.
It’ll never happen, centralised means stable. Just check out what this company called Google have built!
Not true.
Both Lemmy and KBin map the same activitypub activities to the same upvote and downvote actions.
When it’s running in server mode it provides a similar UI too when it’s a client, except now you can browse the snapshots/policies of each client that uses it.
Not quite full management but yeah, good for home use.
My vote goes to Kopia.
Both these give you a simple way to search for things you want. They use IMDB and the like to give you a big list of results. You add what you want to your collection and in the background they scurry off to torrent sites or usenet and downloads it. Then they name everything nicely and stuff then in your Plex library.
You can set them up to use specific torrent sites. Download specific qualities, or more likely an order of qualities by preference and all sorts of other tweaks.
Something I’m not understanding is that my link goes to the same place as yours. Mine 404’s yours doesn’t. wat.
Edit. Aaaah theres some funky JS things happening that are trying push you at a user account instead. Which doesn’t exist.
Link for fediverse @newyuzupiracy
may or may not work depending on how your application/instance copes with fediverse account links
Came here to comment this “obscure” combination. That I use. Lol
Kopia is a solid bit of software. I run it on my VPS’s, my homelab and my desktop/laptops. All to a single Backblaze repo.
Not to mention that the defacto package manager (composer) blows NPM out of the water in basically all metrics. From what I understand most languages package managers now look up to or even model themselves on it.
Large parts of my particular departments .gov.uk stack are PHP. All modern (8.1+) using established frameworks and to be honest, it’s a joy. It’s quick to write, easy to understand and very easy to test. The write, run, debug cycle is also essentially instant; although I really enjoy using Go (another bit of the stack) being able to quickly iterate changes is something I absolutely miss when I’m using it.
Laravel + Livewire is some sort of dark voodoo magic. I can write only PHP and have a functioning SPA with push updates and all sorts.
For an organisation hosting as many companies data as this one I’d expect automated tape at a minimum. Of course, if the attacker had the time to start messing with the tape that’s lost as well but it’s unlikely.