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Joined
3 yr. ago

  • and the smarter ones can even look at two or more separate numbers

  • ...also TTRPH, TTRPI, TTRPJ, TTRPK, TTRPL, TTRPM, TTRPN, TTRPO, TTRPP, TTRPQ, TTRPR, TTRPS, TTRPT, TTRPU, TTRPV, TTRPW, TTRPX, TTRPY and TTRPZ games.

    But beyond that, no good use, no siree.

    that was WAY harder to type than I expected.

  • Even in areas where they would fit it's really annoying how some companies are trying to push it down our throats.

    It's always some obnoxious UI element, screaming at me their 3 example questions, and I always sigh and think, "I have to assume you can only answer these 3 particular questions, and why would I ask those questions, and when I ask UI questions I expect precise answers so would I want to use AI for that."

    I have no doubt that LLM's have more uses than I can think of, but come on...

    I'm happy for studies like this. People who are trying to smear their AI all over our faces need to calm, the f..k, down.

  • I can’t think of a game right now that I would want to play so much that I would be willing to install Windows.

    Oh, I actually can. Gnomoria. Which is like 10 years old, unfinished (pretty much playable, though) but AWESOME indie , dwar-fortress-inspired colony sim, does technically have Linux build, but the Linux build has a horrible bug where it corrupts your save after getting to a certain advanced point in the game. For that one, my dear beloved Gnomoria, I actually ended up installing Windows 10 in a KVM a year or so ago :-D.

  • I guess I understand.

    For myself, though, not being a big fan of FPS/RTS games, basically anything I play is fine as long as it's around 30 and most of it is 10+ years old and/or indie game... I'm pretty much in the phase when if the game does not work on my OS (which is barely the case), the game has to go.

    It's rarely the case for me though, last time I really did that was like 7 years ago with Doom 3: I haven't realized that it's Windows-only so I ended up asking for money back on Steam. Nowadays, with Steam Deck & Proton it's not a problem; I actually got Doom 3 on Steam again, and I can play it just fine. (Well, "fine" with the exception that the monsters are scary so I'm scared, but the game is fine!)

    I'm not posting this to feel smug, cos I'm not. It's 100% legit to want your games to look and feel awesome, you deserve that.

    I'm posting it just as a flag, that for people with far less demanding taste, Linux is just fine. I can't think of a game right now that I would want to play so much that I would be willing to install Windows.

  • free & open source model is superior to proprietary, especially for users, and for long term. (funding the dev part is a crazy hard problem, to be fair, but that's true for anything that should benefit users, including roads and health care)

    but the point was that the "people still dumb" take assumes that Linux users are superior, which is a bunch of childish BS of course (wasn't probably even meant seriously)

  • I'm no business man (far from that), but 1% sounds like more than 0. (Technically, 1% also tells us nothing about how much money that is.)

    Also, "1% of users" is one way of looking at it, but if it's killing 1 of 3 major platforms does not seem like a good default strategic move. Things can change (and are changing) so next time MS does something to f* with their users, I think it can be a good move to be on the user's side, not a major OS's side. (And I don't know anything about laser-cutting communities, but I would guess it has more than average share of creative and tech-savvy people who also like (or need) to have good control of their tech -- I mean, this ain't no spreadsheet app.)

    Again, I have no idea what it takes to make laser-cutting SW work, but simple short-sighted common sense seems like a poor excuse.

    I have no horse in this race (I barely know what laser-cutting is---I do know a bunch about rpm and deb packaging, FWIW) but I suppose the real reason is on the other side of the equation. But it seems they have to be doing something wrong for it to cost so much that they're willing to go, shrug, and pull their foot back out of the door. (Or they really just thought about the simple maths, and someone felt smart and brave to have do the painful decision.)

    By the way, and this is 100% speculation, that "something" could have been an old dependency and/or architectural decision, so if your guess is right, there would probably be no better time to fix it than now.

  • I might be out of date but for a long time my 2 nephews (10 and 13, cousins to each other) have been playing Blox Fruits, which I understand is pretty much a standard "grind" MMORPG. (Which I don't necessarily find that bad; having to put a lot of work in a character and seeing it grow slowly and steadily can be a lesson.) I like how they are having fun trying to coordinate and take out a boss together (sometimes dying all the time), but I suppose other games can give that, perhaps even better-looking ones and certainly ones made by less shady companies. (Oh, and actually working on Linux/steam deck)

    So I was wondering if there are other games that I could introduce them to, if only to remind them that world outside Roblox exists. I never played any MMORPG's (or pretty much anything multi-player, except Minecraft/Terraria/etc. with the kids) so I'm out of the picture. I've only tried few in my life and never stuck for long.

    Albion Online seemed child-like enough, albeit a little boring for my taste. One I really enjoyed recently is Path of Exile (and I it looks more than good enough to be hard to resist for a kid), but who knows -- is that safe for 10 to 13 year olds...?

  • Dixmoor is divided between two congressional districts.

    I think it should be "two congressional dickricts" (but who am I to say, I don't even lift. I've actually never lift there.)

  • I usually just click the UI button which gives (a bit confusing) template like this:

     
            ::: spoiler spoiler
        ___
        :::
    
    
      

    then I replace second spoiler with the always-visible text and the ___ with the hidden content, ending up with Markdown like this:

     
            ::: spoiler star wars secret
        this is an example so i won't actually include the spoiler
        :::
    
    
      

    (ie. the `

    ...which renders like this:


    just a normal text

    ::: spoiler star wars secret this is an example so i won't actually include the spoiler


  • I never said when was the flux. (Jury's out on that, whether it had something to do with dinosaurs dying.)

  • the number of games in my library that won’t run on Linux is vanishingly small

    at this point, it's pretty much only about Roblox.

    ...which I don't want to play, I'm not happy about my nephews playing, but that seems like the only big one which really continues to struggle on Windows.

    edit: that's from my limited POV, as someone who loves gaming but i don't follow or try out big new titles, I'm pretty much happy with my 30 favs, trying out like 5 new games a year, usually older or indie titles.

    1. don't call yourself "power user"

    It might just be me but it gives off "I can set up a printer, yay!" vibes.

  • Happy cake day, my friend! 🐧 🥳

  • You should have used nano(1) to write that joke.

  • Also how the everliving hell do you add AI to input devices?

    Think one of those UI's that move your mouse to an "OK" button, but even worse, and everywhere (..ehm, everywhere it feels like). Add a Crowdstrikeability potential and you've got your AI crap. What's not to love about it? (and by "love" I mean "hate"...)

  • That's actually the leaning tower of Eiffa.

  • Welcome back!

    "Funny" story, there's been some flux in a gravitational waves or some yada yada, and next thing you know, surprise, we've been teleported to an alternative universe where politics SUCKS ASS.

    That's how.

  • “yah sorry but i already watched that one”

    .."this morning"