

Sadly, steam VR and fusion360 are still tying me to windows. :(
Sadly, steam VR and fusion360 are still tying me to windows. :(
My wife is Vietnamese, so I have a basic grasp of it, but they don’t really have a word for yes.
The verb itself is used to answer the question.
Want something to drink? Drink.
Want to go to the park? Go.
They have a word for no, but as you can probably ascertain, it’s only for the negative.
Funnily enough, that is a keyword in rust.
(it’s a placeholder to remove any bikeshedding)
The trick is to get friends to play games with.
Xfce is still wholly in xorg territory.
Iirc there’s work being done for Wayland support, but last I checked, it’s not nearly far enough along.
Not entirely true.
In an apartment in the middle of a city, noisy neighbours can be a problem.
In those cases, it’s best to jump to 5 GHz, and leave the 2.4 band alone.
It does, but performance seems a lot laggier than Windows.
I’ve been using Linux full time for a while now, and only recently installed Windows on a secondary drive, just for those two things.
Before, on Linux, it was a bit of mixed bag. Sometimes it would start up without issue, other times sound wouldn’t work, etc.
Using corectl is a must, and make sure you have a stable steam install. (iirc the steam I installed didn’t come with half of the 32 bit libs it was expecting). I’m rocking a 7900xtx, so it’s not exactly low-end, and half-life alyx was giving me a lot of stutters.