Given it’s a 3d print and cost about $0.60 to make each one…
Now if they made the STL as well then it makes more sense.
Given it’s a 3d print and cost about $0.60 to make each one…
Now if they made the STL as well then it makes more sense.
Always keyboard and mouse, never controller.
But yeah I’ve looked into alternative setups but it ultimately always means additional hardware to run the windows games.
My main machine is 95% gaming and 5% hobby work in CAD (also not on Linux) for 3dprinting.
Any coding is already a Linux laptop thing.
Until Destiny 2 gets Linux support I’ll unfortunately always be bound to windows. At least as a dual boot.
But if I’m forced to use windows anyways I feel like I’ll never make the jump to Linux. I’ve got a Linux laptop for the other use cases but gaming remains Windows only for me until the game I play with all my friends is cross platform.
But this man still thinks Linux is difficult and not easy to use
He explicitly said that it was incredibly easy to get set up on old hardware and that everything he did just worked.
All of his reasons why Linux is hard to use he specifically framed in the context of “historically speaking Linux was bad but now Linux is good”
Were you even paying attention?
That said, if you’ve ever tried to pair a controller with Linux that isn’t a PS5 or Xbox controller it will be rough. Had to use the CLI to change Bluetooth configs and install non standard drivers to support it on Mint
It is. From what I can tell the AI doesn’t usually respond to “obscene” questions.
It is not real.
There have been a lot of “inspect element” fakes going on.
But there are also a lot of real ones. Like “Drink 2 quarts of piss” or “Add glue to your pizza”
Or speech that hurts his feelings
Federated Stack Exchange isn’t harder for AI to eat. If anything it’s easier.
/shrug
I’d take that bet, but I often am relying on packages that are significantly out of date as a professional Android developer. 2 years is mild.
There’s no obvious rootkit unless the developer put it in and if it works with your version of Pulse then I wouldn’t see what the issue could be. It’s mostly a front end access to your Pulse where you’re making and mixing digital.
Security consciousness is good but I think you can trust this one.
But I’m also just a stranger on the Internet ❤️
All true. It seems obscure and niche enough to not be a scam. There’s only a single contributor and based on his activity elsewhere it seems like it was probably just a passion project.
Fair
But also it shouldn’t need any network access. The code is open source and you can look through it if you’ve got the expertise.
I use Voicemeter Potato to do virtual mixing of inputs. If you’ve got an output you should be able to route it through Voicemeter.
… Assuming that it works on Linux.
It looks like somebody was trying to do a Linux version here: https://github.com/theRealCarneiro/pulsemeeter so I assume Voicemeter doesn’t work on Linux.
There’s probably some way to manipulate PulseAudio to do this as well? But the Pulsemeeter option Is probably your best bet even if the repo hasn’t been touched in 2 years.
Definitely a useful tool and one you should’ve learned in a college algorithms course. Binary search backs a lot of high performance data structures
The main solace you can take is how quickly xz was caught: there is a lot of diverse scrutiny on it.
Doesn’t matter if it’s a prerequisite
Not to mention the major hurdle for Linux gaming is anti cheat software being brought over. Too many games are 100% unplayable because the devs don’t allow their anticheat to be installed on Linux systems
I have a very handy command in my .vimrc for this -
command! JSON setlocal filetype=json | %!jq .
Anytime I’m in a json file that isn’t formatted it’s as simple as typing
:JSON
to have it all sorted.