Hackers (1995)?
Hackers (1995)?
This is the best answer. I’ve been doing it for years at work. Dual-booting is just very inconvenient and WSL(2) is the worst of both worlds.
Install Linux on the machine and keep windows in a nice secure kvm-based cage where it can do less damage.
So far I’ve traded in all my Playstations for the latest versions. But this price-hike and no disc-drive are a dealbreaker. Guess I’m going for a new gaming PC and a Steam Deck now. Too bad Sony, you messed up.
Too bad, hardly any information in this AI narrated video.
TL;DW:
As others have said: it depends on your technical expertise… But a nice and cheap solution is hosting a static blog build with Jekyll on Gitlab pages.
Yeah, but reader-mode in FF for Android helps.
“I don’t always test; but when I test, I test in production.”
Holy snark aside… 18% preprinted on the bill? That brunch better included a BJ then. And yes, I’m European.
Hey, careful now. German jokes are no laughing matter…
I got this game finally last year, after waiting for the bugfixes, and have been playing since then. I’ve got over 170 hours now, did all the sidemissions and now finishing Phantom Liberty, and loved every minute of it. This was my first dive into the cyberpunk-genre and it is impressive, especially the dystopian future that also seeps through in modern times.
The way Cyberpunk 2077 tells its story and does world building is beautiful. The immense city with twirling roads, mountains of trash and dysfunctional society is really immersive. I understand that it is not possible to give every citizen a full back story with limited resources but the amount of detail and love that they were still able to put in is commendable. Even after all this time spent in the gameworld it still manages to surprise me with random encounters while exploring.
I’m glad I waited for the bugfixes and had only a few crashes and minor glitchy physics. I hope they learn that delivering a good product is more important then deadlines, since players like me will wait anyway.
Fun fact: in no other open-world-game I got run-over by cars as much as in this game. Hmm I wonder, maybe all cars evolved from Tesla’s in this universe? (j/k)
This is exciting! Amarok has been the best music player I have used since XMMP and was sad to see it fell by the wayside… Can’t wait to try it again.
Don’t worry, also you will get a chance to learn… It’ll be fun!
Spaces are fine in filenames. Just always always always quote your paths and/or variables…
Sadly no, that one is three months old. Hopefully they’ll publish it on the Linux Foundation yt channel or something.
Well, I’m still sceptic and the marketing driven website low in details doesn’t really help. Most of these projects conveniently forget the whole supply chain for the needed resources. But if it works, then great! The more solutions we have the more chance we have as humanity to survive.
Great explanation, thank you for the well written post.
Because there is no “simply store” yet. Efficiently storing energy is not really solved. There are lots of snake-oil companies with braindead ideas (like lifting blocks of concrete to build a tower). But heating water and storing it like this seems like a feasible option. Very cool but expensive… I do hope it works.
Man pages are great to have, all documentation easily accessible, mostly complete and directly available in your terminal.
Compare this to the shitshow that is git --help
in windows opening a stupid browser. Somebody should be defenestrated for that decission.
I’m running Mopidy with web interface to stream to multiple audio output devices (like my receiver in the living room) using Snapcast on Pi’s (some with HiFiBerry module) over the network. Mopidy also integrates nicely into my workstation with KDE using MPDRIS and a local Snapcast server.
This works for both my music collection and some webstreams. I’m quite happry with this setup.