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  • which generative model did you use to generate this post?

    your best bet is probably to take a look at Lutris. Both client and website. And then go from there.Think about how multiple instances of the website should interact with each other. And think about how the client would work with such system.

    Also, aren't there a few open source Steam clients? See if there is anything useful in those projects as well.

  • ah yes, that, wormhole.app, that is closed source. (but if I am reading this correctly, some early iteration of it is open source. https://github.com/saljam/webwormhole )Magic wormhole is a different thing.

  • can you link to the post that claims the protocol is not open? I'm interested in looking into thatanyway, source for the magic wormhole can be found here: https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole which also links to both the Mailbox code and the Transit Relay code.

  • While others already pointed out the similarity to persistent LiveUSB, I would argue that this also feels a bit like Android desktop modes, like Samsung Dex.

  • yes, valid point, thank you for the correction

  • As jet points out, QEMU for actual hardware virtualisation.

    There is one relevant thing, which is not exactly in the same category, but does somewhat similar thing:containersmost popular example being Dockerhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Containerization_(computing)containers don't emulate whole hardware stack like virtual machines do, they just run the guest OS on top of host OS.so because they don't put resources towards emulating hardware, they are much more resource efficient.so if your problem is "I'm running Fedora but I want to run something that for some reason runs just on Ubuntu", then you could use containers for that.containers are mostly used in headless environments (as in servers, no GUI), so running and displaying desktop Linux inside them is a bit tricky, but it can be done.

  • indirectly forces you to buy wireless earphones

    USB-C wired headphones exist

    edit: lol, replied too quickly. You mention wired headphones in the next sentence.

  • I think that the insistance on headphone jack has gone too far.There are now enough wired USB-C headphones and wireless earbuds available.Yes, there are edge cases, like people who work in audio industry where most equipment uses jack as standard connector, or car aux ports, etc.But when it comes to most casual listening, there are enough solutions.

    When migrating to the new phone I tried with USB-C to 3.5 adapter. It did not work most of the time. I suspect that the issue was in my somewhat defective headphones, which have damaged wire and therefore unreliable connection.Previous phone and other devices were probably able to mitigate the occasional "disconnect", while the adapter completely dropped connection.

    But then I bought USB-C headphones, which work fine.

  • LineageOS 22.1 on FairPhone 4

  • Time to promote Loops all over the internet?

  • ayy lmao

  • are there custom ROMs for TVs like there are for Android phones?