-0.05% might be insignificant, but do you think it has to do with more games requiring kernel-level anti-cheat?
-0.05% might be insignificant, but do you think it has to do with more games requiring kernel-level anti-cheat?
They can and they are making their own chip designs to do the job.
The cloud part of Apple Intelligence runs on their own designed hardware.
I just use whatever is included with the desktop environment. On KDE and GNOME launching an application involves pressing the Super (“Windows”) key, typing the first couple of letters of the application I want to launch and pressing the return key.
I might be missing something here but I don’t know how other launchers could possibly make this a simpler process.
Show 'em, that’ll teach these nasty fanboys! Reads like writing that got you a big dopamine rush.
I agree, commenting “Use Firefox!!!1!11” on every post remotely related to (other) browsers doesn’t help anybody, just like commenting “Use Linux!!!1!11” on every post about a vulnerability in Windows doesn’t contribute anything meaningful at all.
Look, I also disagree with what Mozilla is doing here and yes, they 100% deserve the flak they are getting for it. But - like most things in life - it’s not black and white. Firefox could still be less intrusive to your privacy than Chrome (I’m not saying it necessarily is, but it could be that way). A different example: your mail provider could track every time you login to your account, or it could analyze and track the content of every email you receive. One is clearly worse than the other, right?
Which browser(s) do you recommend/use?
There is no definitive roadmap.
Let’s see if this really affects all Linux systems or if the stars need to align for this to actually be exploitable.
Great games as well, but I was mostly playing on PC during the PS2 era. Loved their original Crash Bandicoot games as well. But Uncharted and also The Last of Us was pretty special to me.
Larian Studios
And Naughty Dog during the PS3 era.
youtube.com/tv is/was the YouTube website optimized for big screens. It’s basically just a different layout for regular YouTube.
OP is talking about YouTube and I can watch 8KUHD just fine on Linux.
I’m not sure how that would help in letting lost people go.
How do you not do that? It’s all in your local network, how would it not work offline…?
Except that in every other generation the console actually got a lot cheaper after a couple of years.
Will reflash my Deck once this hits stable as it’s acting up in various different ways.
Yeah, duplicate flags should just be ignored.
Catppuccin Latte works well too!
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That was very cool. Almost like supercar manufacturers still servicing their very old car models (with a big price tag attached, but still).
To be fair, a big portion of the work that goes into Linux (at least the kernel) is done by paid developers working for big corporations.
Missing built-in FDE is one of my main gripes with SteamOS. It’s why I don’t really do anything besides gaming on the Deck. It’s a portable device that could easily be stolen or lost, so this seems like a major oversight.