I use sunshine and moonlight. It's designed for games but works far better because of it, as in if it's good enough for games, the latency will be far better than other RDP protocols.
It doesn't do clipboard sharing though.
I use sunshine and moonlight. It's designed for games but works far better because of it, as in if it's good enough for games, the latency will be far better than other RDP protocols.
It doesn't do clipboard sharing though.
I've recently started replacing most of my shell usage with org mode and babel, along with GitHub copilot and similar LLM backed tools it's like autocomplete on steroids
Drag a selection box around it, or use ctrl. Or right click.
Anyone know if there are networking benchmarks for these? Can it act as an IP gateway at link speed?
(And is there any hope for a 10G one?? It turns out it's pretty expensive otherwise to get a 3gigE+ router, and the one my ISP provides sucks)
What kind of edits are we talking? Firefox can add signatures and text now in its built-in pdf reader.
I use yay
so I just go to ~/.cache/yay/sunshine-git
after the failed build and change the PKGBUILD, then use makepkg -si
to build and install it.
You can use the patch
command to apply the diff.
I didn't have to do anything special on my desktop (nvidia 535.xx driver / wayland / Arch) or my laptop (AMD 7840U / wayland / Arch). I never bother with proton GE or experimental or whatever, I just install it on steam and let Valve figure out the best defaults. On my laptop, it plays at 2256x1504 on low with 30fps (never checked RAM usage, but I have a lot of RAM), and on my desktop I play in 4k at over 100fps with no real issue.
Have about 40 hours on it, never even seen a crash or anything.
I think your brain probably wanted to say "home remedy".
If you're a tinkerer it's kind of addicting. I thought I'd give it a try just to see what it was like, and ended up staying up all night customizing it, and now about a month later I don't really want to go back to KDE (been using KDE for almost 20 years)
Don't know why, but this title just made me realize that King Arthur and Robin Hood are both brands of flour.
I didn't measure performance, I was talking about battery life, but no, I didn't do any benchmarks.
I don't know all the details, but isn't it set up to be some type of not for profit corporation to prevent that? Though I guess OpenAI is also not profit, but I was hoping it'd be more like Signal to stave off enshittification