It depends. I got a new MasterCard debit card last week, and the numbers are on the front. Only the CVV is on the back.
Bun, meat, salad, tomato, onion, Cheddar.
It depends. I got a new MasterCard debit card last week, and the numbers are on the front. Only the CVV is on the back.
They are also still complaining about PulseAudio, despite Pipewire having mostly replaced it, while spending hours fiddling with ALSA to use their headphones.
The problem: incomprehensible init scripts
Not quite the same but there was a working GBA emulator before the console released.
RetroArch and most of its cores are under the GPL or MIT, which allow commercial use.
It’s Linus Torvalds.
It’s missing a lot of features that Wayland “developers” (spec writers) don’t want to add because they personally don’t need them. For the few features they actually add, they leave it to WM developers to implement them, thus creating different incompatible implementations.
Are they also opposed to coreutils being a single project with dozens of executables doing different things?
This just in: Rockstar Games announces GTA 6 and RDR 3 will only be available on Rockstar Social Club.
Valve isn’t powerful enough to force big publishers to stop their anti-consumer practices. They will just use their own store, and Valve will lose a revenue stream.
Same. I use nVidia on Wayland, and experience more crashes and panics than when using the iGPU. With older versions of the driver, I could consistently trigger a crash when exiting an app which used the discrete GPU (such as Steam), or by switching between a game and Firefox.
$ poweroff
kernel panics for some reason
have to use the power switch anyway
Such is life when using Linux on a laptop.
On the Switch /s
So that’s why she died in the series!
Have Nintendo ever used GPL software?
Another Wayland implementation! Just what we needed!
I wonder what exciting features this will support years after KDE.
Same as every other store with DRM: they won’t. Still doesn’t mean you own your games.
It’s not yours. You buy a revocable license. Read their TOS.
But Linux ISOs are copyrighted. The rights belong to all contributors who created them, and licensed them under terms which allow anyone to redistribute them for free.
I don’t. I find them hard to read.