

The first time you do a presentation and forget how to add an external display, that was what made me stick with a full DE.


The first time you do a presentation and forget how to add an external display, that was what made me stick with a full DE.


I run MSFS 2024 using proton on Linux, and have had reasonable success running other native windows addons (BeyondATC, opentrack for head tracking with webcam) in the same proton prefix by installing using protontricks then launching them all using the “exe.xml” trick for MSFS (see: https://forums.flightsimulator.com/t/start-multiple-programs-on-msfs-startup-with-this-exe-xml-tip/350698). I just do manual keybinds for my hardware inside the sim and it all works well, as a bonus performance seems a bit higher than on Windows.


Navidrome is great if you are looking for a self-hosted web streaming alternative.


I don’t have any friends.


Ironically the easiest way to play Fallout 3 these days is on Linux via Proton where it works perfectly.


It’s really good from a compatibility perspective (i.e. most games at least will run) but there are still a few performance edge cases that have more to do with Linux than proton itself. For example, ray tracing for AMD performs significantly worse than on Windows unfortunately (I get ~45 FPS for CP2077 on my 9070 XT vs ~55 FPS on Windows with the same settings). Rasterization is a different story, and some games actually outperform Windows in this area. Another area which is a little annoying is dealing with games that require extra related programs running alongside them. I run Microsoft Flight Simulator (which performs great using proton) however it is a little tedious getting all the add-on software to start inside the same proton prefix, the same story is true for dealing with mod managers in other games.


And the best part is that this is driven by economics, not even policy at this point. Renewables are cheaper.


I wonder if this also reflects a general shift away from Ubuntu of if the phenomenon is mostly limited to the gamer demographic.
I have a seemingly yearly tradition where I manage to convince myself to try out KDE then am usually back on GNOME after a week. I genuinely don’t get the hate for GNOME. It looks clean, has great defaults (especially the keybinds) and mostly stays out of the way. I don’t hate KDE, it’s just not for me and that is okay.
This game made me realize that I too am part of the homo-sexual underground
Arch on the desktop, Debian on the server is the way to go. Both solid, community (non-corporate) distros that fit each use case.
Problems between them and the steering committee, there is a post about it on their discourse
The entire moderator team just resigned


No thanks
I find my uncut wood a little too big to fit in the fireplace, so I think I will say cut.


It’s an alternative “app store” but for only free and open source software, highly recommend checking it out!


Yes workout tracking works fine, not quite as polished as Connect but it is functional.


You cant use it to create or manage workout plans. It is feature complete for the health data as far as I can tell (HRV, sleep, etc).


I think it is only on F-droid
wired > 2.4 ghz > Bluetooth
There are limitations that make Bluetooth annoying to deal with (unable to interact with BIOS using a Bluetooth keyboard for instance)