Almost all of the taco bells near me still have the $6 box, and when I've traveled the majority on the road still have it too. I'm guessing all the ones near you have a shared owner who's raised the price.
Different taco bells have different pricing, most taco bells have a $6 app only box that's one of the best value meals you can get in fast food, but some individual taco bells raise the price on it.
For example, of the 4 closest taco bells to me 3 have the $6 box, but one charges $12 for it. That expensive taco bell has everything marked up at least 30-75%. It's not the worst in the country though, there's a taco bell in NYC that charges $25 for the $6 box.
This is the one I use, you'll need to go to the website in desktop mode, download the .desktop file, copy it to the desktop, and run it. Then just follow the instructions.
You can choose what emulators to install. You'll need to acquire game roms elsewhere online, and then put them in the appropriate game system folder. A few of the more modern emulators will require bios files or things like that to work.
It takes a little setting up, but once you're done the games will show up in your steam library looking like native games.
One more thing I'd recommend is to set up some emulators or other non-steam games. That way you'll always have something to play, even if you do run into some Internet related issues.
Emulators are great for this, emudeck and other emulator programs make it very easy to set up, and many emulated titles are both battery friendly and don't take much room compared to modern games.
Yeah, it's an unfortunate side effect of most PCs always having Internet access. Hopefully it won't give you any trouble, but it sucks to run into a game that won't run offline or that is insisting on a license check when you know you won't have Internet anytime soon.
4-5 days is more time without Internet than I'm used to, so other people may have better advice.
For using the Steam Deck offline, you can either use it in online mode (without Internet), or switch it to offline mode. For most people, it's best to just stay in online mode and never touch offline mode even if they'll be offline for hours.
However since you're going multiple days without Internet, I'm guessing you'll probably actually need to use offline mode. I would recommend launching any newly installed games in online mode once, then switching to offline mode (both in steam settings and wifi turned off) and making sure everything still works. It's hard to determine what DRM different games have, and what will work or won't work without Internet. Anything that you find doesn't work can be refunded if you have less than 2 hours of recorded gameplay, and you may have to rely on that mechanic to deal with games that have DRM that keeps you from playing on the ship.
Also worth noting, offline mode specifically means the deck is not connected to Steam's servers, but wifi and non-steam internet services can still work. Putting the deck in offline mode is supposed to keep you from having issues with the steam license check, but other DRM programs can do license checks as well and may fail if you don't have WiFi (regardless of if you're in steam offline mode or not).
Thanks kind bot stranger.
For other communities, the various Linux gaming communities will all be decent.
https://lemmy.world/c/linux_gaming https://lemmy.ml/c/linux_gaming
Do you have Internet in the ship? The biggest potential issue is that many games need an Internet connection once every few days to recheck the license.
I don't play that many FPS games these days, but I would highly recommend DOOM (2016) and DOOM Eternal, they both run fantastic and are great games.
Cyberpunk is pretty good these days as well. Titanfall 2 is a great game and goes on sale for super cheap, but when EA switched it from using the origin launcher to the EA app it apparently caused some issues with the game crashing or refusing to run sometimes. I haven't tried it myself since the changeover, so I don't know how bad the problem actually is.
I can probably provide more recommendations for adventure games, but I'd need some examples of what kind of games you like.
There are lots of things that are very hard to program, but people can do very easily. For example, play Go or recognize that an animal is a bird.
Machine learning/ai makes it competitively simple to make computers do some of these things, but at the cost of efficiency and speed at runtime. This is true if computers vs people as well, a human brain is much slower, less efficient, and less accurate than a calculator.
Machine learning/AI is exciting because it enables computers to quickly be trained to do tasks that were impossible or would have required years of dedicated effort. The tech world is excited about it because whole new enterprises and areas of tech may spring up, big markets that were previously out of reach.
Downsides:
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AI uses a lot more electricity. Especially for things that computers can already do, using AI is very inefficient.
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Limited control. You train an ai model to do a task, but you don't have direct control over how it thinks. If chatgpt gives a wrong answer, they can't just trace the program and figure out why. It takes serious effort to figure out how chatgpt answers simple questions, so figuring out how it gets complex answers or why an answer is wrong is nearly impossible at this point. This also applies to unwanted behaviors,if you had a really good history chatbot who happened to turn out racist, you can't just turn that off. You end up having to retrain the model, or secretly add "make sure your answer isn't racist" to every submitted prompt.
So basically this is just apple getting stuck over their insistence to not allow additional web browsers on their iOS devices (if you install chrome/etc it's just a skin over the safari web engine).
I remember being so confused when mine showed up. I never heard anything back about being chosen as a Chromebook beta tester, so the box was a complete unknown when it arrived. And then I started opening it and found this, and was extremely confused.
Side note, but they later sent me a second one for some reason. Only significant difference between the two was that the second one came with a sticker sheet for decorating it.
$6.50 for a pizza here, pretty great deal.