Floppybutton

@Floppybutton@lemmy.world
0 Post – 5 Comments
Joined 5 months ago

Yes, basically. But she did hold office as a dem for a term before she flipped. Though she was basically Joe Manchin in horn-rims and a skirt, at best.

A new guy wouldn't necessarily know the history of any distro, and a fair assumption to be made by them is to just jump in using the most recent version available, over something "two years old."

The flatpak has all of the required dependencies included in the file and are sandboxed when you run the program. Typically installing the app via your package manager or storefront would rely on dependencies previously installed on your system or install them during the setup process, and running them on the system will draw those resources from wherever they're stored. This is why you'll find flatpaks are typically much larger than the footprint of a traditional program on Linux.

I can't say for sure but I'd venture a guess that the code for the emulator hasn't necessarily changed, so they haven't seen fit to iterate the version number in some time, but the flatpak was rebuilt to include the newer versions of dependencies that interface with your newer hardware. Just a guess though.

Have you tried the flatpak to see if it solves your issue?

4 more...

I've got a (black) pair and really like them. I'm not sure what the comment below is talking about but I haven't installed any Anker apps and they work just fine for plug and play use.

I can't imagine someone whose deal breaking criteria is the color would care about audiophile-level controls on a pair of BT headphones.

You don't need an sdk to set up flathub.

I don't use Ubuntu but reviewing the commands on the flatpak website they seem pretty straightforward.

https://flatpak.org/setup/Ubuntu

From there you should be able to install Kega from the Kega listing by clicking the install button.

https://flathub.org/apps/com.carpeludum.KegaFusion