I mean it runs on a steam deck – what’s holding you back? Or do you just want to run it with better settings?
I mean it runs on a steam deck – what’s holding you back? Or do you just want to run it with better settings?
This is amazing, thank you!
Anyone know if this is one of the first (modern, as in uses a modern engine like Godot) open source games like this where us other kinds of programmers can learn from?
Isn’t this more of a litmus test of whether or not they have lime cordial in stock?
Back during the WoW days (the flying mount expansion), every time I would walk home from Uni I’d think: “This would be a lot faster if I turned into a crow and flew over these houses”.
I played a Druid.
I updated my AMD framework BIOS using fwupd last weekend with no problem on arch.
I guess it’s finally to the point where selfhosters can admit to using k8s and not be bombarded by comments saying it’s overkill, which has happened in the past for:
Anyway, I believe there is a tool also to turn docker compose files into k8s manifests if we want to take this a step further!
Yeah I’ve enjoyed all the Pokemon games in the last decade (I also dropped over 100 hours in Palworld).
If you listen to the internet, however, we’re apparently what’s wrong with Pokemon, because we’re not allowed to enjoy it unless it’s perfect and lives up to to everyone else’s very specific expectations, but the sales figures don’t lie, there are certainly more than dozens of us!
I suppose if you really like tools, Makita counts as an entertainment franchise.
Drag a selection box around it, or use ctrl. Or right click.
Spreadsheet
Curious to hear what it’s like making parts with a spreadsheet. Is it like coding?
I use openscad a lot, and just tried using spreadsheets – adding parameters to each property in a part still seems really clunky, compared to editing a scad file in Emacs, which I vastly prefer, especially now that there’s AI code autocomplete.
What kind of edits are we talking? Firefox can add signatures and text now in its built-in pdf reader.
I use yay
so I just go to ~/.cache/yay/sunshine-git
after the failed build and change the PKGBUILD, then use makepkg -si
to build and install it.
You can use the patch
command to apply the diff.
I think your brain probably wanted to say “home remedy”.
If you’re a tinkerer it’s kind of addicting. I thought I’d give it a try just to see what it was like, and ended up staying up all night customizing it, and now about a month later I don’t really want to go back to KDE (been using KDE for almost 20 years)
Don’t know why, but this title just made me realize that King Arthur and Robin Hood are both brands of flour.
If this can handle routing 10g this is a great choice to use as a router. It’s actually quite difficult to find a gateway that’s around this price and ISPs (at least here in Canada, or my part of Canada) are offering internet over 1Gbps at the same price as gigabit, but their routers are awful.
I didn’t measure performance, I was talking about battery life, but no, I didn’t do any benchmarks.
Even Intel has these. I think this patch set goes a bit further and takes into account the silicon lottery differences between cores (according to the patch series)
I’m using the patch set on my framework 7840u and didn’t notice a difference though, though this is really YMMV.
The steam deck won’t pull past 3A anyway (all usb C cables are rated for 3A), so unless you’re using a USB-A to C cable, you should be getting full speed, unless the cable is damaged.
Though it doesn’t appear to hurt!