I give Valve the benefit of the doubt and assume that they know that there’s plenty of consumers that are heavily against a kernel level anticheat. Valve is not really known for anti-consumer bullshit like this.
I give Valve the benefit of the doubt and assume that they know that there’s plenty of consumers that are heavily against a kernel level anticheat. Valve is not really known for anti-consumer bullshit like this.
Totally depends on the use case. For data hoarding on a NAS, it’s absolutely fine and the sane choice in regards to pricing.
Jellyfin server with Infuse on an AppleTV is a match made in heaven!
EndeavourOS. Can’t you see the original comment from blackstrat?
It’s basically base Arch with a graphical installer and some reasonable (but optional) default packages.
I’m not sure, here’s the entire dmesg output: https://pastebin.com/MZfhB0xK
Yeah, temperatures are usually between 40-50 °C, so that should be fine.
Since Endeavour is just Arch with a graphical installer and a few extra tools, I‘d say it’s way more popular.
Wait, this is a real speech? Jesus Christ.
Same. Really wanted to give Wayland a chance, but having artifacts on blurry windows where the cursor was is just too annoying for me. Plasma team is already aware of the issue but said it’s too huge of a change for 5.x
To be honest, X11 is not terrible, even with multiple monitors with different refresh rates. I’m running 2x 60Hz and 1x 144Hz without any problems on X11.
Definitely! Much more user-friendly and expandable than configuring PS1 manually.
Uhm, OP was asking for a Linux tool.
The link doesn’t load. What did Gates do that you‘d put him in the same category as the rest?
My guess is it was an actual gif that exploited some flaw in how the OS handled gifs and thus was able to execute code.
Yup, feels like Apollo before 😊
It’s a good way to play the old games, but it doesn’t quite catch that feeling because it’s only played by hardcore sweaters.
wtf, is this just obscured javascript?
That doesn’t mean anything. I once had an issue where every few hours, a random application would crash on Arch Linux, but not on e.g. Debian or Windows. But this wasn’t an Arch issue per se, but was instead related to an UEFI overclock setting (which defaulted to on). After turning it off, everything worked fine.
So while it seemed like an Arch issue, it was actually hardware/overclock related, it’s just that the other OS wouldn’t run into the trigger for the crash.