[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 4 points 6 hours ago

For VR, if you have a Quest headset and good WiFi, you can try ALVR with SteamVR, it works just fine for me while playing BeatSaber but depending on games your milage might vary.

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 1 points 6 days ago

True, if you have extra money, ...

It just 'feel' bad/wrong like now Google has a brand that they will quickly kill any project they start.

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 17 points 3 weeks ago

But you have a lot of cold air to cool it down, and on a side note it makes your room warmer which you might want in that cold region 😅

(But the energy savings is hard to argue with)

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 23 points 3 weeks ago

Funny :)

Hard to be sane with so many broken hardware implementations... 😅

Cudos for the Linux developers!

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 33 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I call those estimates BS like always, but who knows.

Maybe they should focus on giving people a way to access those legally? Where on that poster campain say where to go? And secondly... They as always still introduce the BS regional locking!

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 17 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

It first downloads all packages from net, then it proceed totally offline starting by verifying downloaded files, signatures, extracting new packages and finally rebuilding initramfs.

Because arch is replacing the kernel and inittamfs in-place there is a chance that it will not boot if interrupted.

This issue was long resolved on other distro.

One way to mitigate it is by having multiple kernels (like LTS or hardened) that you can always pick in grub if the main one fail.

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 81 points 2 months ago

Old good factorio headless Penguin, it's like that for so long...

Hello fellow Factorio players :)

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 67 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Because Nginx Proxy Manager exists.

And also because for me it started from web hosting where Apache and Nginx dominate and later because of many easy to understand example configs from the net including many "docker letsencrypt" examples.

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 24 points 2 months ago

You can go to /var/log/apt/ and read the history.log as it will contain every single package that you did install/remove.

Based on that you can just restore it to working state by manually undoing the changes (removing installed, installing removed)

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 46 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

Only [ Confirm ] and [ Set later ] in the dialog? No way to never set/change/cancel? Rapist mentality?

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 33 points 5 months ago

don’t run any commands that you don’t understand. Ask it to break down any commands it tells you to run if you don’t understand them.

You need to pay extra attention to this, as ML models will spit out commands and parameters that doesn't exists if there was not enough examples in training dataset for that action. Especially with explain as it could just spit out totally wrong but "sounding good" explanation for parameter etc as it not always will tell the magic keywords like "typically" that indicate that it doesn't have confidence as it's "based on other similar command/knowledge".

In your example it spit out:

 -m: Prune empty directory chains from the file-list.
 --prune-empty-dirs: Exclude empty directories that result from the inclusion/exclusion pattern.

which is actually exactly the same parameter with 2 different explanations, you can confirm this with man rsync

 --prune-empty-dirs, -m   prune empty directory chains from file-list

So the more edge case you have the bigger chance it will spill out bad results, but those new models are shockingly good especially for very common use cases.

[-] kolorafa@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

I concur Buyer should not gain rights to product, so they should not be allowed to profit from it, but they should be able to preserve it, unless the license that you actually buy had a time limitation, but that should be clearly stated when you buy it that you only buy access to it to (at least) X amount of time like you have with online subscriptions.

670
submitted 1 year ago by kolorafa@lemmy.world to c/games@lemmy.world

This should be illegal, companies should be forced to open-source games (or at least provide the code to people who bought it) if they decide to discontinue it, so people can preserve it on their own.

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kolorafa

joined 1 year ago