What exactly does this do compared to regular KDE-Connect on Plasma or GSConnect on Gnome? Is this if you run any other DE without native KDE-Connect?
klangcola
Is IOT LTCS version legally available for consumers? Or only for businesses?
The point is that the heat isn't accumulated, it is dispersed. To the outside environment generally.
Harvesting excess heat from AC might be possible, but only on an industrial scale. The temperature difference is so small it's hard to make it do useful work.
In general, heat is a "high entropy" energy (high disorder), it is hard to convert heat energy to useful work. When doing any kind of work (converting energy from one form to another) there are heat losses.
Isn't fwupd already included in SteamOS? Or is there a specific 8bitdo fwupd tool?
I'd argue Skyrim etc have an "open world" above ground in addition to many "linear worlds" , i.e. the caves and houses behind loading screens. Open world games let you choose where to go and how to get there, as opposed to linear "corridor" games like Half Life or Halo where you literally follow a single path from A to B as you progress from one level to the next.
Then there's games like original Fable which blurs the line, because technically you choose where to go and how to get there, but each loading area is so small, it doesn't feel like an open world at all. And also you can't go off the path.
Btw if you don't like loading screens, have you tried Space Engineers? You can literally travel from one full sized planet (~40km diameter) to another full sized without a single loading screen. While flying you can walk around the inside or outside of your spaceship, no loading screens.
Behold! The power of search beckons you :P
I completely stopped caring about how the Systems Settings menu is organised after all the improvements they did to search a few years ago
Also it's only a tax on overnight stays. Which some small towns and rural counties overwhelmed by day-travelers are not happy about.
And Iceland! More islands more better
Never heard of them , but sounds like they're gaining traction.
They're also a financial supporter of open street map: https://blog.seznam.cz/en/2024/12/mapy-cz-now-financially-supports-the-openstreetmap-project-helping-to-contribute-to-its-operation-and-development/
I haven't seen it mentioned here, so just an FIY: Linux Mint is a "regular" distro, while Bazzite is an immutable distro, meaning the root filesystem is read-only.
That means a lot of the "normal" ways of doing stuff you find online will need to be done differently. For example installing system level packages requires a reboot, to boot in to the new "system image". If something gets booked you can reboot in to an old system image to recover. Regular desktop (Flatpak) apps can be installed without rebooting.
Bazzite is based on Fedora, and very similar to Fedora SilverBlue (immutable version). So if you can't find answers when looking online "how to do X in Bazzite" try instead "how to do X in SilverBlue".
And FYI Linux Mint comes with an easy to use app Timeshift for system level backup and restore (by default it does not backup your documents etc in your HOME folder). Very handy to recover from a borked update or installing something you shouldn't have.
Ugh, me neither. Bought by Snap-On according to Wikipedia:
Bahco is a Swedish brand within the hand tool industry, which is now part of SNA Europe, part of Snap-on.
Yes, and a few KDE apps work great on Android.
But more FOSS is more better, so GTK on Android is great news for both Android users and GTK developers