

Same. I still feel like I should be parking the heads on my 10mb hard drive. Honestly at this point, I’m too embarased to ask if there is a proper way to send my servers for a reboot, and I cross my fingers I can log back in.


Same. I still feel like I should be parking the heads on my 10mb hard drive. Honestly at this point, I’m too embarased to ask if there is a proper way to send my servers for a reboot, and I cross my fingers I can log back in.


Because they took time to make something from scratch with ingredients. i.e. Cooking. linux ricing started with only Window Managers and occasionally you get someone that modifies a DE. These people start from scratch to build their perfect environment. They aren’t doing after market modifications. They literally pick the components they want and put it all together, write all the configs. Hence, Cooking.


Linux Ricing
A cooking term dude. Pull your head out of your ass.
Brave on GrapheneOS works great. Worth a download.


Agreed. Worth it, when you need it. I get the sentiments of your post though; we’re not trying to fit a kernel on a 1.44MB boot disc anymore.


Bruh, I’m ded.
It’s probably your mom.
Is this what peak performance looks like?


https://www.gamingonlinux.com/steam-tracker/#engsplitanchor
Naa, it’s not a bug. The Steam Hardware and Software survey is a random sampling of machines. Sometimes it’s just an over sampling in some demographic. It seems to happen occasionally. I’m sure there will likely be a pull back as per usual. But, I think it will be more in the low to mid 4%. I think the network affect is finally kicking in. Always good to see YoY growth, so no complaints.
Where is the lie?


Yeah, he doesn’t know what he’s talking about. There is a shitload of frontend developers that specialize in web standards and technologies. Electron was developed to take advantage of that deep pool of frontend developers. The side affect, is that other OSes can just support electron and they get the developers and the applications for free. Which has been a major boon for Linux users and those looking to escape Microsoft’s vendor lockin strategy. Today might be different, but in the past, nobody was intending to support Linux by creating electron apps. If they cared so much or it was so important, they would have been using Qt and GTK prior to Electron.
Nice. ProTip, checkout ProtonPlus or ProtonUp-qt. They manage different versions of Proton for you. They both do the same things in about the same ways. ProtonPlus will match better with Gnome based Desktop Environments and ProtonUp-qt will match the Kde like environments.
This is correct.