We all know there isn’t going to be a steam deck 3. Best we can offer is a steam deck 2 episode 2.
We all know there isn’t going to be a steam deck 3. Best we can offer is a steam deck 2 episode 2.
Client: “Can you switch these two colours, you have 1 minute to fix it or you’re fired!”
Result:
Outer Wilds.
Fusion is effectively renewable. Use a small portion of energy to do electrolysis and you got your fuel. We won’t be running out of water any time soon.
Same, I thought it was used commonly too.
I like Ardour. Unfa on YouTube made a great tutorial on how to use it.
To be fair there is so much JPEG compression on the image, you can’t see much of anything.
It isn’t misusing metric, it just simply isn’t metric at all.
Sounds like you want a proper backup solution. Take a look at borg backup, a tool that supports encrypted, deduplicated, compressed, incremental backups. You can even directly save to your cloud via protocols such as ssh, s3, etc.
single master text file
Sounds like something you are using to manage your packages to me…
Stop giving them ideas!
IANAL but it looks like they are violating Apache 2, as they are supposed to retain the license and mark any changes.
I only really use them with the keyboard, desktop mode or any game that uses mouse emulation.
You missed a factor of ten from the gravitational field strength, but still not great. Their heat batteries work better when it comes to heating, but that is mostly limited to just that.
There’s pros and cons. On one hand, packing your dependencies into your executable leads to never having to worry about broken dependencies, but also leads you into other problems. What happens when a dependency has a security update? Now you need an updated executable for every executable that has that bundled dependency. What if the developer has stopped maintaining it and the code is closed source? Well, you are out of luck. You either have the vulnerability or you stop using the program. Additionally bundling dependencies can drastically increase executable size. This is partially why C programs are so small, because they can rely on glibc when not all languages have such a core ubiquitous library.
As an aside, if you do prefer the bundled dependency approach, it is actually available on Linux. For example, you can use appimages, which are very similar to a portable exe file on windows. Of course, you may run afoul of the previously mentioned issues, but it may be an option depending on what was released.
Can’t include any proprietary code, so using the google sdk would invalidate it I believe.
Sure. If you are using an nvidia optimus laptop, you should also add __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1 __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia at the start of the last line when running in hybrid mode to run mpv on the dgpu. You should have a file at ~/.wallpaperrc that contains wallpaper_playlist: /path/to/mpv/playlist
. You may want to add this script to your startup sequence via your wm/de.
#!/bin/sh
WALLPAPER_PLAYLIST=$(cat ~/.wallpaperrc | grep -v '^\w*#' | grep 'wallpaper_playlist' | sed "s/wallpaper_playlist: //")
xwinwrap -g 1920x1080 -ov -- mpv -wid WID --no-osc --no-audio --loop-playlist --shuffle --playlist=$WALLPAPER_PLAYLIST
Hope this helps!
I set mpv as the root window which worked well. I stopped using it a while back, but if you are interested, I could dig up the simple script for you (literally one or two lines iirc).
I think children go in dictionaries so you can look them to via name (key).