League of Legends works perfectly on Linux
League of Legends works perfectly on Linux
How is it possible that users noticed strange behaviors (new Cron jobs) and they didn’t check the script launched by those jobs 😱
For what concerns flatpak, did you try flatpak remove --unused?
Edit: I didn’t read you already did it, nvm
Rustdesk, I use it for work
Do you still have windows installed?
If I am not wrong I read somewhere that this happened on windows too in the past days
When I started looking for a different browser, I almost chose Vivaldi. Then I discovered it was based on chromium os in the end I opted for Firefox
Signed. It makes absolutely no sense
This is sad
Well, good for them that are happy with the segmentation fault (?) Every time I see it I start screaming
I use Pop OS for gaming & working and I personally suggest that, never had problems.
For games, you can check protondb for compatibility with proton/steam. For other launchers you can use Heroic Games Launcher for epic and gog. For EA Play (or how tf it is called now, ex origin) I run it from steam as a shortcut but in general you can use Lutris for them and there are particular games (like league of legends) that are executed via Lutris.
For what concerns Microsoft Teams, you can use a web browser as I do. While for office you said that you have an office 365 subscription so I suppose you can use word from a web browser.
You can use virtualbox without problems.
Tl;Dr: if you don’t do nothing, the CPU stays at 0% utilization. Magic?
(I’m kidding)
What are the advantages of using postgres? It makes radarr/sonarr faster?
Agree, I opened the link because I thought the same thing
Considering my gaming laptop, it does 1h on Linux and, if I recall correctly, 2hrs on Windows. You can pick a laptop with a good Linux support so that you can have a good battery life
The vim related extensions works for real? 😱 I need to try them ASAP!
Yep Cloudflare protects against classic DDoS (like many clients doing a lot of small requests). Here attacks are performed presumibly by users that know very well how the Lemmy’s backend works and where bottlenecks are, so that with a small number of well made requests they are able to mess up the backend and Cloudflare doesn’t notice it
In a very simple manner, is a file that contains all the content that a website (in this case a subreddit, but it can be a blog for example) publishes. For each publication, the RSS file contains an entry and each entry contains information like the author of the publication, date, content, summary, media links and so on.
You can use an rss reader to aggregate different RSS feeds from different sources and read them from a single app.
Oh I didn’t know they were aware of that, awesome!