As long as it continues to be sold on store shelves, it’s modern enough to count.
As long as it continues to be sold on store shelves, it’s modern enough to count.
I can’t see the name Crash and not think of the 1996 movie with James Spader. Which is weird as fuck.
Wrath of the Righteous*
It’s a fork bomb. It exponentially forks processes in the background in an attempt to consume all CPU cycles.
I had a similar problem with one of my displays going wibbly like that every time I rebooted during POST and system boot. Only going back to normal once X started.
When I checked my monitor’s display settings when it was wonky, I found that it had the refresh rate set to 14hz and really strange resolution. Turns out it was the display port cable. Replacing that fixed it right up.
Recent news that they would be releasing games that would have previously been exclusive to X-Box on other platforms such as Playstation has led to many a rumour that MS may be planning to stop developing the console at all.
Rofi is a good alternative to dmenu as well.
In every dev job I’ve ever held it’s been me or one of the other devs doing demos (usually me though). Granted I haven’t worked on anything truly high profile that a demo would be An Event.
There kinda is a movie with a premise similar to that. Violent Night
All the benefits of their Visual Studio add-in, Resharper, are built-in to Rider.
And it’s faster because they don’t have to work within the restrictions placed on VS plugins.
If everyone treated it like you do, this wouldn’t be an issue at all. But these days everything with permadeath gets the roguelike label and that makes it hard to find the traditional roguelikes if you don’t already know about them.
Sure, that’s fine if people were actually specifying any sort of modifier. But calling everything a roguelike makes it hard to find the traditional roguelikes for those that like them. I’d be ok if the terms were standardized with modifiers like “Traditional Roguelike”, etc, but they aren’t. Everything with permadeath gets the label roguelike these days.
Several years ago I had a significant hardware failure and was without a PC for longer than I care to admit. When I finally rebuilt it, Windows wouldn’t activate. So I nuked it and haven’t looked back. It’s not the first time I installed Linux. But it has been my daily driver since. Now I only use Windows for work, and Linux even there whenever I can (which isn’t often, but sometimes anyway.)
But the constant criticism of these new users posting in this community makes for a pretty unwelcoming community. If we want Linux’s market share to grow and become more relevant to the average user, and we really should, then we need to be a welcoming community that encourages new users. Not a community that is hostile to new users. The good news is that it seems the majority of users here aren’t complaining. But the complaint posts have been increasing it seems, and I’d personally like to see that stop.
Instead of complaining, if you don’t like a post downvote and move on.
Oh look, yet another fucking post complaining about new users posting about their experiences switching to Linux. This should be a welcoming community welcoming to all Linux users new and old.
Personally, I’m finding all of these complaining posts to be far more irritating.
It’s in contrast to something like LaTex or markdown, where you edit the syntax for formatting directly and don’t see the final result until you preview or save it.
Do you know what those dependencies are? They may be installable using protontricks, or manually via wine into the prefix if that doesn’t work. I have had some luck doing that for other software in the past that required dependencies that weren’t satisfied.
It’s available on Steam, so you could get it there and run it through Proton. I don’t know how well it works there like that, but if it doesn’t work you could refund it.
There were a couple of high profile cases in Canada a while back.