The arch wiki has some good info on running standard Linux distros on the deck.
The LCD models are generally good to go, but the OLED models don't have full support yet.
The arch wiki has some good info on running standard Linux distros on the deck.
The LCD models are generally good to go, but the OLED models don't have full support yet.
Not exactly, the UI is the same, but game mode doesn't have a DE running in the background using resources and some other changes.
He has an upcoming game, and has been at GDC showing it off. He should be back to regular videos next week.
The app has to make a request from your Lemmy instance to get notifications. For "real time" notifications it would have to be requesting updates constantly, which wouldn't be appreciated by instance owners and could maybe even get you blocked.
No one can tell the difference between 60 and 62 degrees F.
This is true in the sense that someone can't walk into a room and say "it's 62F in here" accurately, but if you're in a room that's 60F and you raise the temperature to 62F you can definitely feel the difference.
I'm glad to see less exclusivity deals for the Epic store, but I could never really blame devs for taking the money. From what I understand, many were offered enough to make the game profitable even if they didn't manage to actually sell any copies on the Epic store.
Those kind of deals are a really nice safety net for indie devs, hopefully they'll get by ok without them.
Honestly I don't think anyone can really look at TotK and not think it was a massive undertaking. They took the giant open world of BotW, made it bigger, and added a ton of more physics interactions, and have it running on a 7-year-old gaming tablet. It's incredible they could do that at all.
No, I haven't. I had seen them as an option, and assumed they would be as easy to use a Luxtorpeda.
Some searching brought up these reddit comments with instructions on getting it working. Definitely looks more complicated than I hoped.
Luxtorpeda doesn't support many games, but it's pretty great for all the games it works for.
For anyone unfamiliar with the project, you can select it as an alternative to proton for a game, and for any supported games it will download open source projects that replace the original engine/client for the game. For example selecting it for Morrowind will run Morrowind through the OpenMW project, which gives a much better experience than the original game engine.
Here's a list of all the supported games. There's also sister projects Boxtron for running DOSbox games, and Roberta for running adventure games through ScummVM. All should be available to download through ProtonUP-qt, which is available on the discover store.
Wikipedia has a good article on it, including photos of what the marks look like. They're practically invisible to the naked eye, getting them to show up usually requires additional steps like taking high quality scans and running them through some color filters, or using a UV light.
From the EFF coverage of it, it sounds like every laser printer probably prints these marks now. I'm not sure if inkjets or other printer types do or not.
I'm sure a company will start offering ai models for this kind of thing.
I'm less experienced with LLM, but with stable diffusion you can have a main model, and then have smaller detail specific models added in to shape the results. So I would imagine a company will start offering a service where they have base language models with certain amounts of general knowledge/styles of speech, and can mix in smaller models trained on the lore of the world, character's individual history, and things like that.