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And Wayland accessibility is very bad.
And Wayland accessibility is very bad.
I use flatpak steam and flatseal to remove user home permissions so games don’t see my files.
I’d prefer to use Nix derivations and firejail but I couldn’t get it working last time I tried.
My preference for nix expressions to flatpaks is for better reproducibility guarantees, easier introspection, easier debugging, and less duplication.
Flickering makes it true for all xwayland games such as proton until nvidia driver with explicit sync.
Disagree. They should be forced to open it up for the community to maintain it when they end support.
I never thought id pay for Kagi and that paying for a search engine was ridiculous. Then I kept seeing loudly positive feedback from reputable people in my circle and tried the trial.
I pay for it and never have the “I only ever use !g on duckduckgo” problem.
Sorting by web pages with least ad trackers is a cheat code to find old style websites with people sharing knowledge for knowledge’s sake rather than profit.
That flickering, is it only on Wayland? I’m on 6.7 and have flickering on Wayland but not X11.
How is KDE slightly non-windows? Its applications and how they interoperability reminds me more of Mac I guess.
I use Wayland on NixOS too and everything works fine except slight flickering in games.
I think it’ll be fixed soon though and I can fully move to Wayland.
Virtualenvs for everything that don’t duplicate resources and are reproducible.
Need to use strokes to make gestures for cycling, todo cycling, etc and see how it works.
You don’t need two.
Being an introvert who’s great at socializing means you don’t have problems socializing but it drains your energy.
Strong assumptions can sometimes get in the way of understanding.
For instance you say “I’m in the middle of work, why would they interrupt me”.
There seems to be a strong assumption that the other person believes as you do that getting work done is the most important thing at work.
In my experience though, forming relationships for future connections and ensuring work is tolerable to enjoyable is more important to most than getting work done.
I feel like limiting or discouraging them would really hurt adoption.
Many times people share their use cases.
If someone with similar use cases finds out “wait, it us possible for me yo use Linux?” they could become tomorrow’s post.
If you install gnome and use it in desktop mode you’ll see what I mean.
It was needed to safely further support for concurrent features? If they follow through on adding that support, there will likely be adoption.
The problem is in most cases the implementers stop at “same thing but in rust” without taking advantage of that.
I can’t fully blame them since just duplicating an existing thing is a huge undertaking.
Didn’t this “meme language” ship in a recent Linux kernel?
I extensively tested apex legends with different kernels and found a difference.