I've only played the first few minutes of the first Half Life (I know, it's on my list™). I had to turn off texture filtering immediately; the game looks terrible otherwise. Question: Why did games of this era (Morrowind also comes to mind) look this way, i.e. blurry?
riced minecraft? i love you
I ought to learn French…
You might not even have to log out: Just change the user in the terminal: su - user2
That's PolyMC, a Minecraft launcher. It has a cat button.
You're extremely ignorant and clearly speaking out of your depth here.
That never stopped anyone else on the internet. ;)
Why not? Once they're against a terrorist attack and later they're against the repression of the Uyghur people. It doesn't have to be connected to Islam at all.
I remember liking it. (That might be because of the better engine.) Don't forget to check out the mods for Dragonfall and Hong Kong — somebody has ported the first game into Hong Kong's engine, the Antumbra saga is cool as well.
And if they did target just one distro the blowback would be intolerable as always.
Would it be? Steam officially only supported (maybe still does) Ubuntu for a long time and I've never seen much blowback.
It's cool to see Godot used for a serious project. The original was made using Java, if I recall correctly.
I dropped out of uni because of the first game. Don't do this to me!
Is it possible to learn this power? I'd like to have some hair moved.
Is it possible to learn this power? I'd like to have some hair moved.
What's my favourite terminal? The one that fits my desktop environment. When I used XFCE I used its terminal, when I used i3 I used kitty, and now I use blackbox on Gnome.
Ad 1: Try Krita instead of Gimp. I find its behaviour saner.
So, I've tried using Toolbox on my Debian machine. It works and it's nice to have access to newer versions of the programming languages I use. But much like OP, I encountered a problem with VS Code in that the IDE cannot work with the compilers from my toolboxes. For example, Debian has Go 1.19 and Fedora (in a toolbox) has Go 1.21. In-between the versions a small change of the go.mod
configuration file has happened, so VS Code which uses Go 1.19 cannot parse it.
Is there a way to solve this? OP's way of solving this, i.e. installing the IDE in the container seems like a hack. I don't want to manage 20 different instances of VS Code.