![](https://aussie.zone/pictrs/image/434e4285-78c6-4e18-9ecd-496eb07b7c13.jpeg)
![](https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/pictrs/image/a18b0c69-23c9-4b2a-b8e0-3aca0172390d.png)
Nintendo would bomb aid workers if they thought they were carrying yuzu source code
Nintendo would bomb aid workers if they thought they were carrying yuzu source code
I actually found it alot easier once I had learnt C. That way I know where all of the problems are and can use the high-level stuff to get around them, while still fundamentally understanding what is going on
Not as a gaming device but for the novelty of doing something on a device that wasn’t designed to do said something and the attached learning experience 1000%
This router in particular had a socketed wifi card - like in laptops which is pci-e, they used an adapter to connect a graphics card to this (a Radeon HD thing (old)). If you can’t watch the video the creator did an article on it as well which I’ve linked in the post body
15 fps is actually really impressive
Most of them do, I think the main achievement is getting the eGPU set up
Funny you should say that because they just dropped Android Subsystem for Windows
Yeah take me back to the early 20th century, that was when you could get some good warring in
If AMD and/or Intel took leadership of the project the Nintendo move wouldn’t work and they’d have to actually test it in court
Don’t forget the poor shareholders as well. I don’t know what we’d do without them
This. Someone please think of the corporations
That’s what I was thinking
I wish we were doing that here too. Hopefully when we do we’ll take some learnings based on Europe’s experience.
ps: Thanks for the Auto TL;DR bot, has saved me a lot of time assessing articles
PDFs have been an open standard since 2008.
This f*cking sucks. I hope they don’t bring this to Australia, I want to make my native app a web app to save money so I don’t have to pay their bullshit fees and own their shit computers
That is odd. I’ve been using NVIDIA and haven’t really had any issues apart from just installing the proprietary driver through the package manager. People like to make out that NVIDIA is really bad on Linux, but lately it’s been pretty good. My Quadro ~10 year old Quadro M2000 is still supported by the latest driver. Same cannot be said for more recent AMD APUs (looking at you Vega 10).
Maybe next time you try Linux try Fedora since it has more recent drivers, etc. Just make sure you follow the instructions to install the NVIDIA proprietary drivers from RPMFusion. https://rpmfusion.org/Howto/NVIDIA
Otherwise PopOS is apparently good since it bundles the NVIDIA driver with the iso. It’s just been a bit buggy in my experience.
Industry Standard software is just a fancy way of saying “Monopoly”
- You can’t easily define what apps start with startup
For point 2, that is true and improving. Always do some research about program compatibility before completely changing your computer’s OS.
For point 3. Programs are generally installed in /usr/bin
and ~/.var/app
for Flatpaks (analogous to MS Store). Much easier than finding where MS store apps are installed.
Never come across point 4, so I can’t dismiss it.
As with 2, depends on your usecase
GNOME Disk manager (comes with Fedora and Ubuntu) has options to mount drives to arbitrary locations if needed.
I understand your argument but making points like these don’t really contribute to the discussion.
Gave up on office a couple of years ago when I discovered bastet:
https://github.com/fph/bastet/