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These are the problems you're facing on Linux, and I'm baffled!
  • What's the fuss over an "installer"? You just need a folder with the game's files. If you really insist, that folder can be rolled up into a zip file dot exe.

  • What's Your Favorite IRC Client, and Why?
  • Twitch dot tv

  • What are your must-have programs?
  • Sir, this is an AppleBees.

  • Valve Working on Video Clip Recording and Sharing in Steam Client
  • Yep, that's roughly what I'm seeing. If you're playing a very light game where the battery would have lasted 7 hours, you will definitely notice the extra drain. If you're playing a game where the battery was shooting for 3 hours, it makes very little difference.

  • It Takes Two does not require EA app anymore and its Steam Deck Verified now
  • Is it The End Of Days?

    Is EA actually getting .. less shitty??

  • [Solved] Possible to lock a folder? To prevent it from being deleted.
  • Btrfs, snapper, cp --reflink stuff back out of a snapshot.

  • Viruses & Task Viewers
  • Would you know a virus if you saw it?

  • Do apt and snap use the same numbering system?
  • Snaps (and flatpaks) have a much better way of handling DLL hell than good ol deb/rpm/pacman. As such, each app is better able to chase the latest version of all of its dependencies, without worrying about messing up the libraries for anyone else.

    Snap/flatpak also sandbox their apps, reducing the blast radius of exploited or bad apps.

    My personal preference is to use flatpak, and set it up so that it is all --user. With a --user install, you don't need sudo to update anything. Use Flatseal to tighten up or loosen the sandbox, use Warehouse to roll back any broken updates. I don't think snap has any tools like Flatseal or Warehouse, which makes it the weaker packager.

    Anything that can be installed as a flatpak, I do it there first. Then I can just pick up my home directory, drop it in a different distro, and almost all of my stuff follows. A distro becomes little more than "a kernel, a compositor, a baseline desktop environment, and some background daemons".

  • am I depleting my embedded notebook's battery by leaving the power cord constantly plugged in?
  • It's a miracle that the battery is still working at ten years. The most realistic thing is to just keep up with your backups, and be ready to dispose of that laptop the moment the battery starts swelling.

  • am I depleting my embedded notebook's battery by leaving the power cord constantly plugged in?
  • TLP is my favourite tool for messing with the charge limit. And also far, far too many power/thermal management knobs.

  • Are you using GOG games on your Steam Deck?
  • Heroic has definitely had some brown-paper-bag releases. I've had to roll back and hold off on Heroic for a lot of their "major" updates.

  • What are the best proprietary/paid apps for linux?
  • It is a bit different. Have you invested thousands of hours developing skills with a piece of productivity software, and locked your data into their proprietary data format? Has that vendor looked at your investment, and found that they have plenty of leverage to turn the screws on you?

    With a game, you invest tens of hours developing skills, lock your "master sword" in a proprietary save format, and then you save the princess. After that, you're done. It is an ephemeral experience, give or take wanting to replay a few really good games. The game vendor doesn't have that much hold over you, and their grip doesn't get stronger the more you use it. I can replace your game with hundreds of other games, and I don't really lose anything by doing so.

  • Steam Deck game library now 29% larger than that of Nintendo Switch
  • They don't allow you to install other OSes?

    The worst thing that Valve has done is "the main kernel tree hasn't gotten around to merging some of the Deck's EC bits yet". You could run Batocera or Bazzite on your deck today if you want. You probably don't want to, those distros aren't as good an experience as SteamOS yet.

  • NVIDIA 555 Beta Linux Graphics Driver Released with Explicit Sync Support
  • There's a simple solution. Open up your drivers Nvidia, like Intel and AMD have done.

  • GNOME Shell & Mutter Broke Their Good Faith With Ubuntu
  • Ubuntu has an installer that largely works. I just went through trying to install Bazzite (fedora), it insisted that I needed another -890GB of space. At best, I managed to get to where it errored out at the end of another install attempt, and left a broken grub setup.

  • Valve has little to worry about as new Steam Deck rival arrives
  • I just tried installing Bazzite on a desktop, and its installer is a hot mess. The most I could get out of it was an error screen at the end, and an unbootable OS. Grub's config file was just an error message. I couldn't make heads or tails of how its ostree mess was ever supposed to boot, so I moved on to Debian.

  • Mistakes were made
  • Frosty Diarry Dessert®️

  • Mistakes were made
  • The database is running on an IBM made in 1954. Commas literally weren't invented yet.

  • (Newbie question) Did i handle my system crashing correctly?
  • Do the sysreq sometime when your system isn't hung. If it isn't enabled, welp you have to enable it harder.

    Having ssh set up would be a way in when the whole graphics stack falls over (but the kernel is still alive in there). On intel there are /sys entries to dump GPU state, ATI probably has something similar. You have a reproducible bug, if you can get in and grab data while the gpu is in la-la-land, you might be able to submit a valuable bug report.

  • Can You Use Linux Without the Terminal? (How to Geek article)
  • Can you satisfy a woman without learning how to use the clitoris?

    not a clickbait article dot asp dot html

  • rotopenguin rotopenguin @infosec.pub

    aka @rotopenguin@mastodon.social

    Posts 0
    Comments 380