I dont have VR, but i assume you saw this?
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2805545613
I dont have VR, but i assume you saw this?
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2805545613
Thanks haha, i guess i'm an idiot, i took it the polar opposite.
We should disarm the police and dismantle the army though
This person was having trouble with Bazzite the other day. Do you have any idea what the issue could be? Works for me on Fedora
Japanese Sega Saturn is my all-time favorite design
Dreamcast and Japanese/PAL SNES are also up there.
Thanks!
I'm from California where we have Golden Chinquapin (chrysolepis chrysophylla) which has fruit that looks the same, and leaves that are very similar (though with golden hairs on the undersides)
Looking them up, they are closely related to castanea. They also have edible seeds but the spiny shell is hard to get open.
Couldn't finish it: too much whining, not enough substance.
I haven't tried hyprland yet but if this is the guy developing it than maybe I'm good.
Cosmic seems promising. Best of luck to system76, happy to see an alternative opinionated desktop getting some momentum.
I've given up on GOG. No linux client means the whole process of installing/launching games is rather tedious. Also linux game dependencies can be annoying to resolve
Steam on the other hand just handles everything. If it doesn't work at first, it probably will with proton.
I'd love to support an anti-DRM store, but it's tough when there is so much friction when actually playing the games
One of the best apps on any platform
LTS kernels aren't more or less stable. Rather, they have been selected by the kernel maintainers to get security fixes backported to them for a certain time.
Ubuntu does the same thing for the kernels on their LTS versions (technically they usually are not LTS kernels since canonical supports them instead of kernel team)
Overall I'd suggest going with what the distro provides unless you have very new hardware, in which case a newer kernel may be required
Plain old Fedora.
I know the hurdles, i know what to expect, and I've never been surprised by it.
Immutable sounds nice, AUR sounds nice, NixOS sounds nice, but i am utterly confident in my current choice's reliability and comfortable with its idiosyncracies. Everything i want to do works very well.
If i had less time/energy or had to switch, Kubuntu would be my second choice. Less frequent updates and fewer creature comforts, but also very reliable.