Video games are nearly perfect today. The only ones that don’t work are the ones where the publishers have gone out of their way to exclude it by enforcing their anticheat nonsense.
Video games are nearly perfect today. The only ones that don’t work are the ones where the publishers have gone out of their way to exclude it by enforcing their anticheat nonsense.
What year, what distro, which laptop?
Well? What are your thoughts?
Huh! I didn’t realize that. It was a cool product.
What is already installed on the work laptop? VNC? RDP? SSH? Anything?
Funny as in sad
Right?? And the MSX too.
Definitely every other person trying to load the website at that time, in a big burly brawl battle arena.
Meanwhile, in Plasma:
Windows, pretending it can’t read what you’re typing in because you didn’t click “show password”:
Is it not possible to build that functionality into C/++ compilers?
Ooooh that’s a cool connection, thank you for putting that into my head. Like a migraine but it’s the whole sky.
Not just Debian but ditch Gnome too. KDE really pulled me in. So much about it just makes sense that I’m mad I didn’t take it seriously sooner.
Security patches do the opposite of break stuff
Could you explain the “no need to review” part? I do keep hearing good things about Rust.
I compiled my own drivers
You can’t just bequeath bankruptcy!
It just feels nice! Nice and fresh.
I wouldn’t mind generating some more discussion on Pokémon Go.
The “drive somewhere” argument is valid (along with many other arguments that can be leveled against the game), and this is at its core a conversation about motivations, but I’m still using Pokemon Go to get out and walk places.
I’m more likely to add onto existing walks if it means I can spin a couple more stops or put a mon in a gym.
That said, it doesn’t make me want to go for a walk if I’m not already out for a walk. So I guess it works as more of a “walk more” motivator for me personally.