I see. I would suggest looking up other environment variables the Steam Deck sets on boot, but since this doesn't look to be the case, my second suggestion would be hardware spoofing.
But even then, it just doesn't make any sense. Why support only the Steam Deck specifically when it's well known that Valve is updating SteamOS to make it work with other handheld devices like the Legion Go? Assuming they put some kind of hardware checking in the game initialization phase, why go through all this effort just to lose potential players?
Might be unrelated, but Marvel Rivals has a similar problem. If you just download it and play straight away, it won't open; you have to set an initialization flag SteamDeck=1 to make it open (source)
Maybe it's the same situation and this flag solves the problem, or maybe it's something similar
He'll probably go to jail, since there's a ton of evidence against him and his cronies, and most of right-leaning here won't pick a fight with our supreme court just to bail him out.
The real problem is: he won't really pay for his crimes in jail. Because he's a retired army captain, he'll go to a military prison, just like Braga Netto (his ex minister), and while in there he'll have access to cable TV, expensive wine and cigars, and whatnot. For context, our prisoners have a miserable life here: expired food, overpopulated cells and threats from organized crime leaders. Bolsonaro wouldn't last a single day in a common prison here, but because of his age and military rank, there's no scenario where this happens.
The only one who can make him pay is the devil himself, and I really hope he pays Bolsonaro a visit soon enough
I was talking about Westworld, an HBO show about AI, androids and "humanity". And yes, I know the original quote is from Romeo and Juliet, but quoting Dolores fits perfectly given the context
Yeah, it's easily one of my favorites, even though I've never finished it. I was deep into the third season, then I googled something about the show and discovered the last season got cancelled. I thought it was pointless to continue, since one entire season is a gap too big to fill with theories.
Just another brick in the wall of cancelled masterpieces, just like the TF2 Webcomic.
Projects leaching on the work of companies like that, "freeing the code".
You mean it the other way, right? Because these companies you defend use the free labor of voluntary developers from the community, which spend hours and hours developing features, fixing bugs and what not, directly or indirectly. That's how open source works.
When these companies change the project license to a closed source one, they're basically saying a big "f*** you" to the community. Forking the latest open source version of the repository is nothing more than an effort to keep things the way they were.
huge companies will not pay a cent for Linux in the future
Linux is FOSS, you can do whatever you want with it as long as you redistribute it without modifying the license. Android does that; every GNU/Linux distribution does that. That's how it works.
if a license says "you can use it for free, but need to share profits over x$"
What you're describing is "freeware", what this post is discussing is " open source software". There's a giant gap between the two.
Juan