My god the housing market sounds bleak.
I love how many tiny-island-cartoons there are from the far side.
I don't know, the chips look bad. Soaked in oil and not crunchy at all.
I want to give NixOS a try sometime, as I like the idea of declaritively defining the system
That seems to be even more convoluted and complex.
"Just one more abstraction layer, I swear!"
I'm a NixOS noob bytheway, so please correct me if I'm wrong.
The issues I have with these ports:
- They are harder to control if you don't use a controller.
- Using a controller is cumbersome when you're not at home
- I don't know if I can play these ports in 10 years. With a console, I'm pretty sure my PS5 games will work in 10 years because the platform won't change and the PC is at least an open platform, so there is a chance that older games will still be playable on newer systems. But on iPhone it's not guaranteed.
Oh yes, won’t miss that.
My arch install is from 2015. It just works, why should I reinstall?
Huh, that was my first thougth. Why is /home/ configured in systemd-tmpfiles? Seems strange for me.
I had the experience recently with two wifi usb sticks. Linux: Work out of the box, no hassle. Windows: One was not supported on Win 11 and caused blue screens, the other only works on USB2 port, not on USB3 and it was a real hassle to finde the right drivers.
That's why I don't understand people who say Windows is easier than Linux.
How about we wait until the science is actually in before sending hundreds and thousands of satellites into LEO?
Maybe? Witcher 3: Blood & Wine was similar.
I thought that too. But this is the end of the consoles life and devs now know every trick. Also the areas in the trailer are pretty limited, so it's a bit less taxing than an open world game for example.
I think too, that this will be a cross-gen game. But the Switch 2 will be released in fall next year, and it will be announced in spring, at least 6 months earlier.
Looks quite interesting.
The thing with Incus is that you get the image repository and manager and the permissions applied to containers make them isolated and secure environments by default running on another user etc etc
This is really hard to read.
I just don’t have the technical chops nor spare time to make my OS a hobby.
Windows is not immune to this, I tried to get a few years old wifi stick to work and it was a nightmare with different hardware revisions, old drivers that aren't included in windows, bluescreens and a difference between using the USB 2 and USB 3 ports. With Linux it just worked out of the box after plugging the stick into the computer.