Well, Fedora 40 here as well and it just doesn’t work on my computer. Sure, Nvidia, blah blah blah. X does work flawlessly on my machine, though.
Well, Fedora 40 here as well and it just doesn’t work on my computer. Sure, Nvidia, blah blah blah. X does work flawlessly on my machine, though.
Like trying to destroy people’s lives so they can make a few dollars.
Nah, php over python any day. Equally easy to start, equally fucked up core, but the ecosystem around it is so much saner and easier. And I’d argue it’s even easier for beginners.
Unless you need something that only has python bindings, I’d never choose python.
Stop projecting, maybe? No, I’m not forced. But I want to, because I refuse to pay any more money to such a shitty company. I paid for the product, now I’m gonna use it the way I want to.
Price is not my reason for pirating. Seriously, people are different from you, stop assuming that everyone has the same motivation as you do.
I mean, who doesn’t? But nah, I just don’t want to pay a company that does as much horrible stuff as Nintendo does. That pretty much means I own an expensive paperweight which I’m not a huge fan of as well. So I decided it’s gonna be a pirating only console.
I don’t like the way Nintendo destroys people’s lives just because they “lost” a few dollars.
So it will become a MIG switch only system, right? Also, how does one get caught? I’m not into online games in general, so I wouldn’t be playing any multiplayer games. Is the simple fact that the game’s certificate was used on multiple devices simultaneously enough to flag the device?
This can also happen if you exhaust your context buffer, so it might have been a bug with that.
Well, good luck to you, your goal seems noble enough, though I’ve seen a few noble crypto projects turn into a scam. Anyway, I (and a lot of other people) try to not touch anything crypto related with a 10-meter pole (except for Americans, they use a 10-feet pole).
On the 1st page I found exactly one game that I’d maybe want to play, but not like I couldn’t live without it. None on page 2 and one game again on page 3. Every single game I wanted to play on the Deck works (true, some of them needed some tinkering).
Remember, I said the solution is simple for me. Generally the games that don’t work are not really my cup of tea, like online games and generally stuff that’s more cash-grab than a game. There are few games that would make me consider getting Windows to play, but luckily all of those work well. I still wouldn’t install Windows on the Deck, though, I’d probably stream it from some PC.
Well, at least for me the solution is simple: don’t buy those games.
True, still a little salty I had to cancel the subscription, I genuinely liked it. But I’m not installing Windows.
To offset that negative fella, continue posting! I enjoy them.
Let the scamming commence!
Under GDPR they can’t use it, unless you give them consent. They obviously do, but they can’t be too obvious, otherwise they’d have to pay huge fines again.
We use .lh, short for localhost. For local network services I use service discovery and .local. And for internal stuff we just use a subdomain of our domain.
I really should pick it up, I bought it many years ago, played a little, and have been wanting to play again since then. And it’s gorgeous in VR.
I mean, what if I don’t get good after two hours? Will you refund it? Or will I be stuck with a game I suck at that cost $50 or $60 (or however much that was)? Look, I never was good at gaming. Everything I play is on easy or normal. I’m glad most developers keep gamers like me in mind. And as far as I understand, being hard is part of what makes Elden Ring entertaining, which pretty much makes it the opposite for me.
And pretending that everyone is (or can be) as good as everyone else at everything does not make much sense.
Dude, I just don’t like it. The game just wasn’t fun for me. The game’s not my cup of tea. It’s not a hard concept. Also, you kinda move the goal post a bit.
I was talking about Nintendo, they constantly sue people (and other companies) for obscure amounts of money just because they’re rich and can afford it.