Objectively the most rational reason to be there. It’s named X, after all.
Objectively the most rational reason to be there. It’s named X, after all.
It’s hard to feel any emotions while severing such impersonal relationships. I would advise you to do it whenever you feel like it’s the correct thing to do. Go where the users shine, the memes flow and the owners aren’t dipshit billionaires who mine your data, restrict the free internet and pollute your online experiences with conspiratorial nazi bullshit. Be a digital nomad.
This makes me want to invoke the remind me bot, but I don’t think we have one on Lemmy. I wager that we’ll see this exact statememt from fridge-chest when the US gets hit with the next wave of 'rona.
5000 files
0 backups
Someone’s got their priorities mixed up.
Good luck to them on ever enforcing that without even more mass surveillance
I should extend that program and call it scrotum
Refreshing to see a great journalist who also isn’t a complete brown noser.
Prepare to become famous after Google’s LLM quotes you in a few years.
nanana eeice oeee !
shneyae oootsya addyaess ?
I certainly have not! Thanks for informing me.
That’s definitely it! Thanks for clarifying!
There’s a button labeled “User Interface” in one of the alt menus that I don’t remember the name of.
My wifi card on my old laptop worked just fine, until I looked at the log files. 60GB of PCIe errors with a severity of “corrected”. pci=noaer
in grub fixed it right up!
Libreoffice has an option for a ribbon user interface. It makes it nearly identical to Microsoft’s stuff that I grew up on.
I’ve got a Quest 3, and it is the sole reason for my Windows partition to exist. The only way to get the frames from your PC to your headset is through the FOSS Air Light VR. While I do commend the tireless efforts of the volunteers who built it, it is very much not a painless experience to get it working properly. Once set up, it’s more stable than I expected it to be, but I still need to connect the Quest twice every time I want to use it.
I have not played enough games with it yet to say for sure, but if they don’t have native Linux binaries, I can’t guarantee you a playable, let alone comfortable experience. Among Us VR and IEYTD gave me a flickering and nauseating mess, which isn’t too bad on its own, but I could not find anyone who had the same problem or a solution for it (but now with my broader knowledge I guess that my problem is having an Nvidia GTX 1650). Very few people game on Linux, and even fewer play VR games. Hopefully Valve can save the day again if and when they come out with their standalone Index successor.
I suspect that you’re a newbie to VR (me too honestly, but probably not nearly as much). I didn’t get the Quest 3 myself (it was my sibling’s birthday gift). After using it for almost a year, I’ve decided that I won’t get a standalone headset for myself. There’s enough hurdles to play VR already, like needing a bunch of empty space to not destroy your controllers and your home, the cost, the motion sickness, the computing power etc. With how I use VR, the Quest 3 just isn’t that great. The only money Zuck will ever get from me is from my cold, dead hands, so I buy my games off of Steam. This means that every time I want to play VR, I need to make sure that my headset and controllers are charged and updated (controllers as well!), make sure that they are all connected to the same Wifi network as my PC, launch ALVR, launch ALVR again, and pray that the game I want to play works at all. I feel lucky if I can have any fun at all on Linux with VR.
When there are more than enough VR games that I can enjoy out there and I have enough money for it, I’ll look into getting my own setup for it as well. With my current experience with standalone, I’m eyeing the Bigscreen Beyond. It’s super lightweight, has high-res OLED displays and is wired. It is also about twice as expensive as the Quest 3 even without controllers or base stations, but it seems to solve all of my afforementioned problems with standalone, which in my mind makes it worth more than twice as much. To solve the issues of being tethered to a wire and a need for lots of space, I could also get a treadmill. The KatVR ones use lubricated shoes with optical sensors, like those on a mouse, to run (more slip and slide) on a shallow bowl. It’s surprisingly cheap(ish) for what it does, costing about 1000 bucks. While these two devices along with a Valve Index controller and base station kit costs more than three grand, I don’t expect it to provide anything less than a grand VR gaming experience.
My experience with the Quest 3 on Linux was trash compared to my nearly seamless experience with desktop gaming. I don’t know if a different headset could prevent these problems. I can only hope that you will find a great option.
Ah, Oneshot. What a short, sweet and downright beautiful game. Nice work with your rice!
Also, do I hear a rock and stone?
My first introduction to programmimg was Scratch when I was ~10 years old. I can’t think of any more child friendly resources than that.
9 out of 10 dentists recommend our toothpaste.
You forgot to sacrifice your firstborn beforehand
I considered it, but I don’t think that future me would care much to go out of their way to inform an internet stranger that their prediction from a year ago was correct.