

One Finger Death Punch is another great mouse game. It uses only two buttons, which can be the ones on your mouse, to play.
On my SteamDeck I mapped the controls so I just have to touch the two touchpads.
One Finger Death Punch is another great mouse game. It uses only two buttons, which can be the ones on your mouse, to play.
On my SteamDeck I mapped the controls so I just have to touch the two touchpads.
No way, they actually gave me a free Steam key for buying the DRM free version!? And here I was debating with my wallet whether the convenience of Steam was worth buying the game again…
Canada might start ignoring DMCA as a whole if the idiots in my government keep harassing them. Maybe that’ll piss off Hollywood and friends in a useful way…
(Just ignore me laugh weeping at the prospect that billionaires stabbing each other in the back is the only thing I can look forward to in my country now)
Filesystem is either EXT4 or BTRFS, but the partitioning and redundancy from their SHR system is a combination of RAID1/5 and LVM.
It’ll probably run Android, so yes, but your eyes will bleed from the ghosting.
Did some searching, and all of Readmoo’s previous devices run Android. So you aren’t forced to buy any books from them. Install whatever reading app you want and get your books with whatever method you choose.
The rarity is the ability to do it without caring about the massive environmental damage often caused while procuring the minerals.
So you’re telling me…
Half Life 3 confirmed!
If a fix hasn’t made it to Stable yet, then switching to Experimental is the appropriate action to get the game functioning. Just keep in mind that if a ProtonDB review is old but mentions Experimental, then most likely the fix is in Stable by now and switching to Experimental might not be needed anymore. In those cases I’d try the latest Stable first, and then try Experimental if that doesn’t work for some reason.
Keeping note of specific Proton versions is more important if someone says that an older Proton version works better than new ones for reasons. Or if they’re using a forked version of Proton, like GE-Proton, it’s important because that fork explicitly includes things not in normal Proton, like exotic video format support that Valve can’t normally include for legal reasons.
Not SteamDeck, but there is evidence that Valve is working on x86-ARM emulation for a stand-alone VR Headset.
FYI, if you switch to Desktop mode on SteamOS, all those applications you listed are available via the included app store that taps into Flathub. SteamOS also ships with Firefox out of the box. I have them all installed on my SteamDeck already.
I agree on durability concerns, but it did double the height of the display. Not sure how much bigger you’re expecting.
Experimental is its name for a reason. It’s for testing fixes which may or may not fix an issue that they’re investigating. If the fix doesn’t cause any immediate issues they’ll then push it to stable.
So you should really only use Experimental if you have a game or game update that just came out and isn’t running correctly in Stable.
To simplify these are the TLDR ranking:
Stable
Next (ie: Release Candidate, last bug fix check before pushing to stable)
Experimental (ie: Beta, latest fixes that are being tested)
Bleeding Edge (ie: Alpha, automated merges for the latest submitted code from devs, things can easily break)
Hotfix (For quick bandaid fixes for specific popular games that just released or just updated with some breaking incompatibility.)
I’ve been messing with more recent open-source AI Subtitling models via Subtitle Editor which has a nice GUI for it. Quality is much better these days, at least for English. It still makes mistakes, but the mistakes are on the level of “I misheard what they said and had little context for the conversation” or “the speaker has an accent which makes it hard to understand what they’re saying” mistakes, which is way better than most YouTube Auto Transriptions I’ve seen.
I didn’t even realize Intel’s SSD business still survived as a separate company. Apparently they’re owned by SK Hynix.
Yes! I use less all the time, combine it with grep, etc.
Yeah, to this day vim still isn’t intuitive for me, so I just use nano as it’s either often included or simple to install on most Distros.
Unless a script is hardcoded for vim I haven’t had to use it.
Apparently that’s a bug according to the dev, so hopefully it gets fixed. Probably a problem with how they implemented the Steam API stuff.
https://steamcommunity.com/app/3385670/discussions/0/601902918586626263/#c601902918586634949