Vik

@Vik@lemmy.world
1 Post – 213 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

grow a plant, hug your dog, lift heavy, eat healthy, be a nerd, play a game and help each other out

very cautious sneef 😊🥰

The picture with your pup is especially sweet. Glad mum came back for the bebi.

oh look at that lil snoot 😊🥰

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I'd presume through the same mechanism leveraged for achievements:

Timeline and Event Markers

The Steam Timeline appears whenever you’re actively recording. Timeline-enhanced games generate event markers as relevant game events happen. Steam achievements and screenshots automatically create markers as well.

ISVs can enhance this as desired:

In addition to being able to record any game you’re playing, timeline-enhanced games are games that can proactively notify Steam when relevant events happen. These events are represented along the timeline with details specified by developers.

I'd think this could have broader reach than nvidia highlights depending on how easy it is to work with.

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There is a developer facing video on how to enable and enrich timeline events: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwBD0E4-EsI

Though I'm not sure yet in whether timeline events are automatically created from existing game aachievement scenarios etc.

Where did I say they were harvesting data?

I can see this being pretty clever. Valve will be able to interpret a bunch of game event data for smart capture.

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Astounded to see this take here given how much Valve have contributed to gaming on Linux in general.

I don't know if you can really replace android with android.

How does this compare to Graphene and Calyx?

E: I don't see any public repos for the ROM, but I guess that could be a thing later? No mention in the article or their website on if they plan on open sourcing it, but I'm not at my desk right now to check thoroughly enough.

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can we just block instances at the user account level?

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such a good baby!

can this be hidden via registry or group policy?

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They've embraced Wayland, pipewire, gnome and what not, but snap is really questionable, particularly in the Linux ecosystem.

I gather it can be somewhat annoying to contend with (I.e. some apps on Ubuntu may only be available as snaps?)

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I had no idea about Appimage's stance on Wayland. That's very unfortunate.

E: Here's what I've come across so far: https://linuxgamingcentral.com/posts/appimage-dev-rejects-wayland-support/

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Isn't the same true for the 7950X3D?

I doubt you would have many issues using win10 on this platform if you wanted to.

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Does open arena, red eclipse 2 and warfork count?

I think we should just be happy it exists 😅

Headline is kind of bait but the testing and info in the video is still worth the watch imo

And if you had the means to, you could even 3D print your own enclosure since they (and other people) have published files for it.

I gather you can also repurpose the battery as a portable power pack but I'm not sure if this is specific to the 16

They're thinking of something that can work unteathered to a PC, like the rumoured valve deckard system

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AV1 decode is supported on the RTX 3000 series, encode + decode in the RTX 4000 series

For Intel Arc, AV1 encode + decode support is present on all Arc Alchemist GPUs,

For AMD, AV1 decode is on RX 6000 series, encode + decode on all RX 7000 series GPUs

As someone else has recommended, a low end Intel Arc alchemist GPU is pretty great for stuff like Jellyfin, very low price to entry for gfx accelerated AV1 transcoding.

Thank you for the quick fix ❤️

It's a problem anywhere, centralised software repositories help combat it to a degree.

Can you elaborate on being misled there?

As for google devices - yes, there's irony in the notion that the most de-googleable phones are theirs, sure. They're often sold at a loss around the holiday season, though.

Kind of sad how the proprietor of DirectX owns one of the best Vulkan API game engine implementations in the industry.

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Thank you!

I remember signing a petition a couple months as go about this. Who do we appeal to from here?

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holy damn I just realised how long my block list is.

Appreciate the update

I would guess people who play destiny 2?

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I'm not sure when the 2.0 update hit, but if you were playing 1.63 yesterday, I would encourage you to try 2.0 today

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In terms of technology & product offerings (perf/watt, compute density, TCO) relative to AMD, then Intel have absolutely fallen behind.

Though, this story has taken time to reflect in server market share, and Intel are still the major player.

A new start in dGPU is no easy task, but I honestly thought Arc's relative RTRT and compute perf were quite good?

My main complaint would be their Linux support situation for Arc. I'm hoping it will improve over time.

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There's been a resurgence of retro throwback shooters. The first one I noticed was with STRAFE, which released (to a rocky start) back in 2017. It's a brilliant game now, mind you.

You may also want to check out:

  • DUSK
  • Turbo Overkill
  • GTTOD
  • SPRAWL
  • Prodeus
  • Ion Fury
  • Selaco
  • Ultrakill

I'm sure I'm missing some great ones from this list.

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I suppose they wrote battlefield in the headline since it's an EA franchise, but I totally see where you're coming from. At least they mention halo directly after.

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I've resorted to using obtanium for apps like jerboa and newpipe :/

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it's a newer display server protocol designed to replace X11, focusing on improved security, simplicity, and contemporary display technologies such as multi-display variable refresh rate and HDR (eventually).

Thank you for the heads up. I love Firefox for android but this was a very sneaky addition.

He also made a follow up video a few days ago:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_JOtEBFHDs

It's not very intuitive but it isn't so bad once you're familiar; you can take a look at this whenever's convenient for you.

When you boot the system, you should briefly see your BIOS splash screen, along with the key combo to get into your BIOS setup menu. Let us know which mainboard vendor you have and we may be able to tell you in advance (For Asus, it's usually F2, for Gigabyte its the Delete key, for MSI it might be F12 etc). I just mash the specified key when prompted until I'm in.

There's usually also a key that you can hit to select a temporary boot device (I.e. I can hit F12 on my gigabyte board to select any OS detected by the BIOS, not just boot into the top entry).

Once you're in, have a look for the 'Boot' section. You should have the capability to define your boot order. These entries can consist of traditional disks connected via SATA/SCSI/m.2, USB drives, network locations etc.

You can arrange this boot order however you like.

I would also recommended temporarily disconnecting any existing drives when installing an OS on your system (e.g.: Windows attempts to store its bootloader on SATA 0 by default, even if the OS isn't destined for that drive).

Yes, nicely done. I'm on 0.0.47