[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 3 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

If the other person has a Tailscale account, it sounds like the most expedient method is to simply invite them to the tailnet as a non-admin user with strict access control.

You could share a node with an outside user, but I don't know how much the quarantine would affect its functionality. You could also use Funnel to expose the node to the internet (essentially like a reverse proxy), but there are obvious vital security considerations with that approach.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 14 points 15 hours ago

Wildlight is a game development studio made up of former Respawn developers who (allegedly) worked on the Titanfall and Apex Legends games. Highguard was their first game: a pointless, live service, content incomplete multiplayer shooter. It was revealed in late 2025 as the final showcase of The Game Awards, which resulted in a collective sigh of frustration from the audience. The game was released on the 26th of January to a decent peak player count of over 100k (97k players on Steam). It was immediately clear that the game was in a terrible state and it couldn't retain the players. Two weeks after launch, Wildlight fired most of its staff because Tencent, which had been secretly funding the development, had pulled out. It was later announced that servers would shut down on the 12th of March, 45 days after launch.

Even before launch, it was mockingly compared to Concord, another pointless. live service, content incomplete, competitive multiplayer shooter that only lived for two weeks.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 53 points 16 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

This is the main reason why Concord's entirely avoidable failure pissed me off so much. Wildlight's designers and artists spent years creating an entire game's worth of assets (they lacked style and identity, but they weren't bad) and now the game is dead, the studio is dead, and nobody will ever see or use those assets for something better.

I wish they'd sell the assets. I know that some animators would love to get their hands on Scarlet's model.

(edit) Ah fuck, I did the meme. Highguard. I meant Highguard, not Concord.

19
submitted 20 hours ago by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/Dullsters@dullsters.net

Right now I'm moving my stuff from Floorp over to Librewolf and noticed that some of my bookmarks are ones that were auto-created by Manjaro.

Manjaro was the first Linux distro I used as a daily driver (after Windows Update ate my boot partition) around the spring of 2022. I know that four years is not a long time, but within context, I've wiped and reinstalled my PC at least six times (soon to be seven) and moved from Firefox to Brave to Floorp to Librewolf, and those bookmarks survived everything.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 10 points 20 hours ago
[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 13 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I don't understand how having situational voicelines, with transparency and the voice actors' affirmative consent, would make the game "unfinished".

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 33 points 2 days ago

There's one person. He is bald and has a very chokeable trachea.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 15 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

How else would Styropyro get enough batteries for his 1000-kiloamp tungsten vapor atomizer? The "environmentally conscious" choice might prove to be a greater disruption to the ecology.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 8 points 2 days ago

No leaving before you git push, you'd better start working on those merge conflicts!

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 16 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

The treekie in me wants BookData.

(edit) This made me remember The Measure Of A Man and now I'm fucking depressed. They had such high hopes for the future.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 46 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Original article by PEGI: https://pegi.info/news/pegi-expands-age-rating-criteria-interactive-risk-categories

Purchases of in-game content: games with time-limited or quantity-limited offers will be classified with a PEGI 12, games with NFTs or blockchain-related mechanisms will be PEGI 18.

Paid random items: the default rating will be PEGI 16 if the game contains paid random items (and in some cases they can be a PEGI 18).

Play-by-appointment: mechanisms that reward returning to the game (e.g. daily quests) will get a PEGI 7. If these mechanisms punish players for not returning (e.g. by losing content or reducing progress) they will become PEGI 12.

Safe online gameplay: if games contain entirely unrestricted communication features (e.g. no blocking or reporting), they will be PEGI 18.

That wording sounds really unspecific. I wonder how the first two poins will be interpreted with regard to games where the paying for gambling tokens involves multiple steps of conversion. In particular, Genshin Impact and similar games, where the paid currency first has to be converted (at a 1:1 rate) to a general currency that can be earned by engaging with the completely free progression systems.

[-] rtxn@lemmy.world 146 points 4 days ago

I can't fix the problem, therefore I'll be part of the problem.

316
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/games@lemmy.world

Archived article: https://archive.md/HONwC

They'll release one more update (my guess is whatever release-ready content they've already got), then the servers will shut down next Thursday.

"We don't need player counts to be super huge in order to be successful" is starting to ring hollow.

24
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

I've found the solution, and it's exactly as stupid and obvious as I was expecting.

The classroom computers were deployed using Clonezilla from an image that had the VirtualBox VM pre-configured. As a result of this, every VM had the same MAC address, which probably caused a lot of ARP collisions, since all the hosts and VMs were essentially on the same broadcast domain.

The solution was to simply randomize each VM's MAC address. After that, ICMP, SSH, and HTTP worked as expected. Thanks for the suggestions, but it was caused by my own oversight in the end.

(edit) I got around to reading the comments just now, @maxy@piefed.social was totally correct.


I know this isn't "selfhosting" as most people imagine it, but it is about hosting services on own hardware, hence why I'm posting in this community.

I'm supposed to help a teacher set up a networking exercise where pairs of computers are connected directly on a crossover cable and can access services (echo, HTTP, SSH, FTP) on each other. Every computer is identical: Windows 10 host, one VirtualBox VM running Linux Mint with a bridged adapter in promiscuous mode. Each host and VM has its own static link-local IP address.

The problem is, the VMs can't talk to each other, and I don't know why.

From one VM, I can ping itself, its host, and the remote host, but not the remote VM. Each host can ping itself, the local VM, the remote host, but not the remote VM. I've tried connecting both hosts to a layer-2 switch, with the same result.

Can someone point me at the one thing that I'm obviously doing wrong?

(edit) I've also tried to set the default gateway to the host's, remote host's, and remote VM's address, but nothing changed.


Running Linux on metal isn't an option. In the past, the classroom computers used to dual boot Windows and Ubuntu, but the Windows install got so bloated (the software too, not just Windows) that it needs the full SSD.

157
submitted 4 months ago by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/linux_gaming@lemmy.world

An interesting and important look at the development of Factorio's Linux-native port from an actual developer: the platform in general, Wayland, GNOME's bullshit, and dependencies.

43
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/Dullsters@dullsters.net

35000 power-on hours. SMART still reports it as OK.

Time to figure out how to rebuild a RAID 5 array. The other two drives are probably nearly cooked too, but I have plenty of spares that I got for free.

16
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/tipofmytongue@lemmy.world

Somebody accidentally deleted most of the system. There were no executables for any shells, text editors, or utilities. All they had was a single terminal that was still logged in as root. I think they had to manually type in some executable's machine code and echo it into a file.

47

I've been reading a lot about massive stellar objects, degenerate matter, and how the Pauli exclusion principle works at that scale. One thing I don't understand is what it means for two particles to occupy the same quantum state, or what a quantum state really is.

My background in computers probably isn't helping either. When I think of what "state" means, I imagine a class or a structure. It has a spin field, an energy_level field, and whatever else is required by the model. Two such instances would be indistinguishable if all of their properties were equal. Is this in any way relevant to what a quantum state is, or should I completely abandon this idea?

How many properties does it take to describe, for example, an electron? What kind of precision does it take to tell whether the two states are identical?

Is it even possible to explain it in an intuitive manner?

23
This may be useful. (lemmy.world)
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/assholedesign@lemmy.world

I'm getting this error that says Error. I can't tell if I fat-fingered the community name in the URL, or it got removed, or it doesn't exist in the first place, or maybe there's a legitimate issue with the software, but I hope it's useful!

I need to clarify because some people apparently never encountered the error page: it used to show the actual error. It was later changed to not do that.

(apologies for the atrocious aspect ratio)

45
submitted 8 months ago by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/onehundredninetysix

Minecraft and Factorio ain't shit next to Conway's Game Of Life.

338
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/linuxmemes@lemmy.world

Low effort meme while flatpak update finishes.

I understand why having eight very specific versions of the same library is important. Doesn't mean it isn't annoying.

TranscriptFLATPAK EMPLOYEE: what would u like?
ME: one flatpak update please
FPE: so u want "a whole bag of updates?"
ME: no, just a "flatp-"
FPE: I definitely heard "more updates than u could ever handle"
ME: please, no--
FPE: JERRY, FOIST UPON THIS MAN "A FUCKASS LOAD AMOUNT OF UPDATES"

381
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/onehundredninetysix

This image is no longer available on nasa.gov.

581
submitted 10 months ago by rtxn@lemmy.world to c/Dullsters@dullsters.net

It's a Creative Zen Stone that I got as a Christmas gift in 2008. I just found it in a drawer, and it's still holding charge. The last thing I put on it was The Life And Times Of Scrooge by Tuomas Holopainen, in 2015 -- I don't know why, at that time I definitely had a smartphone.

It has a headphone jack, which immediately makes it better than every smartphone produced in the last several years, and it can easily drive my 80-ohm Beyerdynamic. The audio quality is as good as one can expect. The only drawback is that it only holds 1GB... my old CD rips had to be compressed to hell and back.

Let me reiterate that this has been sitting untouched for a decade and was immediately ready for action. No login, no annoying software updates, expired subscription, or remote bricking by the manufacturer. Eat my shorts, Spotify Car Thing.

P.s. A Lifetime Of Adventure is a banger. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWwSVOo5K_k

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rtxn

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