frozen

joined 1 year ago
[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

I have! It was great as well. I think it's my favorite original romhack so far. I'm planning on playing Insurgence next, although that's a fan-game as opposed to real romhack.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 1 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Radical Red and Polished Crystal are peak, in my opinion. I can't go back to the lack of special/physical split, it's just awful.

One of my company's customers is a DoD contractor that uses the government version of Teams, which does require Chromium, unfortunately. Or at least, I haven't found a way to make it work on Firefox yet.

I'm one of those weirdos who actually dumps all my own games with my own modded launch Switch mainly for preservation purposes.

But then TotK came out and performed so poorly on the console itself, I exported my save to play on PC and Steam Deck. Every part of my Switch emulation journey has been legal and by-the-book: dumped my own firmware, my own keys, and my own games.

Fuck Nintendo for bullying these developers.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 10 points 1 month ago

Thus, Docker was born.

"Works on my machine, ship the machine."

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 1 points 3 months ago

IIRC, Samsung recently announced they're moving to A/B partitioning as well.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 9 points 4 months ago

The Twitter thread says that the website with the linked keys is a fake imposter site. Not sure how true that is, but if so, that's fucked.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 12 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Honestly, it's probably not worth the hassle to try to install system apps elsewhere. Steam and Lutris, on the other hand, can put games on any mounted drive. Install them as normal, and then in Steam, set up a steam library in /Apps. In Lutris, you should have the option to choose where each game is installed each time you install one.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 4 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Correct. Unfortunately, it's something that each desktop environment or window manager has to implement themselves. But all the button is doing is moving some config files around, so you can probably do some digging to figure out what it's copying to where.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 2 points 5 months ago (4 children)

This is the system settings application for the KDE desktop environment.

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 17 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

Literally yes. And you don't even need to know the exact pixel resolution of the TV.

Edit: Here are the problems with you "Wayland isn't good enough" people.

First, you don't use Wayland, so you don't even know if it's fixed whatever weird issue you encountered with it before or if it supports a niche use case, for example.

Second, Wayland won't get good enough for you until you start using it and reporting bugs. You think X11 was a bed of roses when it first started? Or do you think they bumped the version number 11 times for fun?

[–] frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz 3 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Not sure if you're a troll, but if you're serious, nothing I say is going to change your mind, so I won't bother.

 

I found MoonDeck while perusing the Decky plugin store and it's absolutely awesome. I've had Moonlight and Sunshine set up for a while because Steam streaming is very inconsistent between Deck and Linux, but I didn't use it often because it's a pain setting up launchers in Sunshine for each individual game. MoonDeck takes the hassle out of that completely, and I find myself streaming GPU-intensive games to my living room much more often nowadays.

I highly recommend it!

 

I was looking through various RCON tools and found this. Someone does not like commit messages.

 

Also, the location on the LinkedIn job listing was a city nearby, even though I'm over 300 miles from SF. Fuckin' dumb.

900
Accurate? (lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz)
 
 

What I mean by this is, when I tap the option to share the stickied "Post launch day chat" post, it shows me that I'm about to share the link https://lemmy.world/post/2580455. What I'm looking for is an option to prefer sharing the user's home instance version of that post, which in my case would be https://lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz/post/2365657.

 

Full specs in first comment.

So first of all, this is not a "Linux sucks" rant, I want to make that clear. I've been using Linux for over 10 years now. Started with Ubuntu, moved to Arch, now on openSUSE Tumbleweed on both my desktop and laptop. I'm a software dev by trade and sysadmin by hobby.

But why in the shit can Valve not get Remote Play on Linux in a useable state? Let me lay out my evening yesterday.

I took my car to the shop for an appointment that I knew was going to last 4+ hours, so I took my Steam Deck. I finished up Spider-Man 1 and moved on to Miles Morales. All of this was flawless (as was playing most of Spider-Man 1 on Tumbleweed, btw).

I got home and decided I wanted to remote play MM from my desktop to the Steam Deck in the living room. All wired, no wifi. The reason for this is that I want to use the power of my desktop to get high quality graphics, as opposed to the medium settings at 30 FPS I get with the Steam Deck. Note that I've done this with some games before, notably Persona 5 Royal, but it's been a year or so.

I launched MM for the first time on the desktop after selecting Proton-GE 8.0-6 (since that's what worked with SM1). Immediately, I was greeted with a warning that my drivers may be out of date. They aren't, but whatever, I clicked okay and the game launched fine. Cool, that's fine, I figured I'd just launch the game on desktop before I go back to the living room and connect with Remote Play. I messed around a bit to make sure it would play okay, set my graphics options, etc., it worked perfectly.

I went back to the Deck and clicked Remote Play. It attempted to connect, but threw me back to the library screen. Weird, but okay. I re-launched Steam on my desktop from terminal, so I could check the logs the next time. Tried to connect again, and it worked. Weird... but okay. Except after loading a save, I was again thrown back to my library screen, with no option to re-connect. I checked my desktop, and the entire game had crashed. Weird. So I rebooted my machine and Deck and tried again. Same thing.

Okay, fine, I figured, you know what, this is one of the things I have a Windows VM with PCIe passthrough for. So I booted the VM, booted MM, set graphics options, everything was great, cool. Went back to the Deck, and tried to connect. Again, it attempted for a second and then sent me right back to the library. That's wild. So I rebooted the VM and the Deck and tried again. Got connected and loaded the game, it didn't crash, alright, cool, we're in.

Next, I started running into issues where I was getting random inputs on menus. Specifically only menus. Weird, but as long as my save doesn't get deleted, no big deal, I guess. So I played for a few minutes, then noticed the frame rate was super choppy, even though the FPS overlay from the host was reporting 100+ FPS. The Deck overlay had errored out and was reporting 3000+ FPS, which obviously isn't right. This is actually a problem I'd run into with P5R before, so I knew the fix was to go into quick battery settings and toggle the per-game profile. This fixed it, but only for a few minutes at a time. I don't remember P5R having this issue so frequently, and it's also a much bigger nuisance in a game that's not turn-based.

I eventually gave up and just moved back to my desktop (Tumbleweed) to continue playing, where everything worked perfectly (minus the outdated driver warning). Needless to say, it was a very frustrating experience for me, and that's not a good thing. I couldn't imagine ever taking someone who's never used Linux and dumping them into that situation. I really hope Valve works on stuff like this.

 

I've tried Jerboa, Liftoff, and Voyager, but I keep coming back to the standard Lemmy PWA with the Lemmy Universal Link Switcher user script.

I want to share links to posts and content, but I'd like for the link to use my instance's version of the content instead of the origin, for two reasons.

  1. It helps my instance federate content.

  2. I want to make content discovery and subscription as easy as possible for my friends in order to push Lemmy adoption. If I share something with them from a community they aren't subscribed to, but they want to subscribe, I don't want them to have to go back to my instance, find the community, and then subscribe. If I was able to share a link to my instance's version, they would've just been able to open the sidebar (or app equivalent) and hit join.

Thanks in advance!

 

I'd like the ability to share a post using my instance's version instead of the original instance, even if it's a setting that's off by default. In the interest of growing my small instance, it would be helpful to be able to share content from other instances through mine, if that makes sense.

Thanks for reading!

 

God, I love this band so much.

2
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by frozen@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz to c/lemmy_support@lemmy.ml
 

I'm currently running v0.17.3 on my server and want to upgrade to v0.17.4. I'm having trouble finding upgrade documentation. Is it as simple as changing the version numbers in the docker-conpose.yml file?

 

I'm a huge metalhead, and Electric Callboy is so fucking fun. I love that they don't take themselves too seriously and just have a good time.

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