A cheap Jeweler's loupe from Amazon. It's like a high magnification magnifying glass with a LED light built into it. I initially bought it to inspect my kitchen knives when I sharpen them, but it's been useful for inspecting soldering work and other random little things.
Others have mentioned a powerbank and one of those multiport USB chargers. I'd second those as well, tho I guess they both can climb in price depending on if you need a lot of power capacity.
Boss: "Have you finished that new feature yet? The deadline's coming up and the client is getting concerned"
Lowly Mortal Programmer: "Sry, you're gonna have to tell the client that Mercury is in retrograde at least until this time next Earth-year"
Looks good! Staring at a blank canvas is always the toughest part, so good on you for putting lines down. Simple lines really are powerful. Being able to take an object and simplify it down as much as possible is an important skill for art. Krita's a great program, too.
Wasn't Marc Andreessen also involved in trying to buy a pile of land from farmers in Califonia to make some kind of weird "utopia" (read: nightmare) city there? What is with these guys and needing to control peoples lives?
I'm really waiting for them to pull a Meta and change their company name to Copilot or something with how insanely hard they've gone in on trying to make AI work
I find that it does seem to happen more often within one batch of eggs, vs different batches. Like if I get one double yolk in a carton, I'd at least not be that surprised if there's another in the same carton. Maybe it has to do with how they sort the eggs, idk
Seems like the Poseidon Website has a PDF that lists some of the software that came with Poseidon 3.
Since it was based on Ubuntu, I'd probably start by using a modern version of either Ubuntu or Mint and then seeing if any of that software you're interested in is available for those distros in their software repositories. No clue if any of the more specialized stuff it is still maintained, or if there are better alternatives nowadays. You can search the default Ubuntu repos online without having to first install the OS here: Ubuntu Packages, if you want
sudo -i starts a login shell as the specified user. Login shell means it'll read that user's bashrc/zshrc/whatever other login files and apply those. If no user is specified, then it'll login as root, so you get a root shell
If I'm understanding correctly, you're trying to install Bazzite next to an existing Windows on the same SSD? I've run into the problem in the past where if Windows was allowed to set up a drive at some point, it makes a really small EFI partition, so sometimes, if you go to install another OS, there may just not be enough space on the EFI partition for all the files needed, so the install will fail.
Check how big your EFI partition is. If it's like 100MB or something, I'd resize it to like 512MB, then try again. IIRC, parted doesn't do too well with resizing small FAT32 filesystems, so you may need to do it from Windows, or through some other way.
Hmm maybe there's something off with a recent GPU driver update? If anything, maybe try an older version of Proton, like Proton-9.0-4. That should be one of the I think there was a minor update to Proton-10.0 at least a few weeks ago, maybe it's not playing nice with something on your system? idk
for Steam, you can right click the game, go to Properties, and under Launch Command, enter PROTON_LOG=1 %command%, then run the game to have it generate a log file in you home folder that will have the appid in the filename.
Are you running the games on the default Steam Proton version, or have you tried other versions, like GE-Proton/Proton-cachyOS?
The semiconductor manufacturer is Rockchip, who makes a ton of SoC's for single board computers. Rockchip has apparently copied ffmpeg's code without attribution and changed the license to a permissive one from LGPL
That's a wonderful use for one lmao