I use this one, and it's pretty nice: https://weasyprint.org/. They implement their own rendering engine so its support of new features and edge cases isn't the best, but every problem I've run into with it has been solvable with a little work. I really like it for laying out printed forms!
The big one was its complete lack of mobility abilities or ranged attacks, so a party with overland flight could attack it pretty much with impunity. Iirc that was most commonly paired with shrinking a bunch of boulders, carrying them up with you, then dropping them right as the shrinking spell expired. This is all from memory 15 years ago though so details could be a bit sketchy.
By default yes, but you can set it to work for anyone on your friends list.
I haven't played Stoneburner yet, but I ran a 10 session campaign of Tales of the Burned Stones (the free fantasy version released as a reward from the Stoneburner Kickstarter), and it was super fun! If you get a chance I highly recommend bumping Stoneburner up in your queue.
I know I'm missing something here, but that just sounds like a rolling release to me. What's the difference between 37 and 38?
How does Fedora's package update scheme work?
Coming from other distros like Debian or Ubuntu, I'm used to package versions being set at the moment a distro version is released, and then those packages pretty much just get bugfixes until the next version of the distro in 6 months/2 years/etc.
I started using Fedora recently, but it looks like for a lot of packages, all currently supported Fedora versions get the updates, not just the testing branch (for instance, when Plasma 5.27 came out, every active Fedora version was updated).
Does Fedora just use distro version numbers for specific core package versions, or is there something I'm missing here?
I'm gonna try to! I only just started today, so I'm up against the clock, but I shooouuuld be able to get my game in in time.
Hacker News is basically Reddit if it only had r/technology and no other subs
My current job is all Ubuntu LTS, my job before that was all CentOS, and my job before that was a mixture of Debian and FreeBSD.