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God yes please, got to be better than who we’re stuck with at the moment
God yes please, got to be better than who we’re stuck with at the moment
So this means it doesn’t take up much disk space right?
Xbox’s store page for the game reveals Call of Duty: Black Ops 6’s install size is an eye-watering 309.85 GB.
Wtf?
That makes sense, for the amount I use this laptop I won’t worry about it for now! It wasn’t noticeably dusty when I opened it yesterday, and the errors occur immediately after booting so I wouldn’t expect it to heat up that fast
In that case if it still works should I just ignore the error for now and replace the card if it causes any issues?
How?
I just tried increasing it but the maximum I can set is 255 and that made no difference unfortunately. All the Windows VMs are also set at 8 and they don’t have any problems
I hope its not a hardware issue, the 2 VMs were running on 2 separate hosts within the cluster so hopefully that’s unlikely! Thanks for taking a look
I’ve just edited the main post with links for the journalctl output. The purpose was just to test some network config, I managed to do what I needed anyway but I’m just curious as to why I had issues with these VMs!
I just left it as default which is 1 display and 8mb video memory
Doom Eternal. I don’t usually enjoy FPS games and I’m not very good at them but I absolutely loved Doom (2016) as it took out most of the things I hate about FPS games. But in Eternal I just felt like I was constantly out of ammo, and there was too much focus on using specific weapons against specific weak points on enemies which I couldn’t get the hang of
It would be good if you could view your significant locations to get an idea of how stolen device protection might work. Apparently I have 103 significant locations but I can only see the most recent 3, none of which are my home despite the fact I’m there right now. I can’t think of 103 places where I wouldn’t want the feature to be active, the only place I wouldn’t want it on is at home and I can’t tell if that’s going to be included anyway!
What makes you say that? I only switched to it recently
I wouldn’t really class that as a backup, that’s like saying you have a spare tyre because you can always buy one from a garage!
Not sure if that’s wrong or not tbh, I use snapper instead of timeshift and I wanted /home included in the snapshots anyway (I think it let me set them up as 2 separate jobs). The reason I went with subvolumes instead of separate partitions is that I didn’t have to worry about sizing. I also know I can reinstall to my root subvolume without affecting the others, depending on the installer for your distro I don’t know how easy that is vs just having separate partitions. I played around with it in a VM for a while to see what the backup and restore process is like before I actually committed to anything!
Why do you have a btrfs volume and an ext4 volume? I went btrfs and used sub volumes to split up my root and home but I’m not sure if that’s the best way to do it or not
“We’ve looked into it and decided we don’t give a shit”
Anyone know what the best alternatives to gmail are? I’ve heard mixed things about proton mail and I’m not aware of many others
If that’s the case I’ll probably just use a keyboard, I was under the impression the analog sticks were helpful for some of the boss fights but if they’re just mapped to keys then I won’t have analog control anyway
It works fine in Windows, although if it took that long to get controller support maybe it’s best experience with keyboard and mouse anyway
What are the main differences from a user perspective rather than hosting? Is it worth checking out?