

I may have to give it a go. I am similarly adverse to mucking with xorg confs.
I may have to give it a go. I am similarly adverse to mucking with xorg confs.
I am very interested in doing this, with xorg or Wayland, and an 7900xt.
Yunhost has always been my go-to.
That book is a not-so-covert manifesto, I swear.
In the book, I noticed upon re-reading – it was always the biggest polluters (usually, the richest of the rich) that had unfortunate drone-strikes while flying.
Not the electric planes. No commuter planes. Straight up 1%-er targets.
B admits to it later on in the book, when they hint B might be Mother.
You don’t disagree, but you are spending a lot of breath and effort to indicate otherwise.
Right?!
Oof. Painful truf.
The reason you’re not getting the replied you want, is because most Athiests are reading this thread and going ‘Oh not for me’ and moving on.
Nah, I quite like getting my GE update alerts in my safe space, Lemmy. I don’t have the time to remember to go check github periodically. I do notice, and read, the posts here and decide if its worth updating my deck/desktop right then and there while I am thinking about it.
So what doesn’t work for you, works really really well for me.
Plus the whole point to good development is small, short release cycles and incremental updates. All we are seeing is the byproduct of a good developer and workflow.
Holy fucking bonkers when you put it that way. Like holy fuck.
Are they that close to something amazing, or is Altman going true Dr Evil megalomaniac?
The anti cheat does already work on Linux, just needs a checkbox tick to enable.
Could you unpack the Why?
Just because you say things, doesn’t make them true.
Fuck sakes. Those features were free on my 2020 Telluride.
Spoofing that handshake would be a bad faith action, one that would not go unnoticed longer term. Instances with a bunch of bad faith actions will make the case for not federating with themselves.
Perhaps a case to be made for a federated minimum-config. If servers don’t adhere to a minimum viable contract, say meeting requirements for rate-limiting, or not requiring 2fa, or other config-level things… They become defederated.
A way of enforcing adherence to an agreed upon minimum standard of behaviour, of sorts
Is there really any scenario where a normal user should NOT be rate limited on posts or comments to some degree? Say, no more than 3 posts per minute? No more than 10 replies?
So a question re distrobox. Can it be used to run additional isolated sessions, say via Xephyr or something, that share host resources without abstraction?
Basically, I want to host two additional KDE sessions in Zephyr (or something) and then run Steam and sunshine in, and point my kids respective clients to them.
Or with PCI pass thru, but I’m trying to avoid that.
Can Distrobox help me accomplish this in any way?
I’d buy tickets for that!