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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)HE
Posts
3
Comments
208
Joined
1 yr. ago

  • He partially has lungs and a vocal chord ?

    Though it reminds me of a conversation you can over hear in one of the Divine Divinity Baldurs Gate games between two skeletons, who talk themselves into how they shouldn't function, and then promptly fall to the floor in a pile.

    Edit: corrected the game

  • Looks like Warzone is one of the unfortunate ones, the kernel level anti cheat currently stops it from working on Linux.

    Reka (added to my wishlist 😄) seems to run well. If it will run straight out the box or not seems to be a little hit and miss. You can check any troubleshooting steps on protondb. This shows Linux isn't quite at the "it just works" stage. But for this title if you do run into an issue it seems like an easy fix.

    Cyberpunk runs really well. I haven't had to tweak anything for my install.

  • I have a very extensive steam, gog, and battle.net library with all kinda of games from wolfenstein 3D to Baulders Gate 3. The only game I haven't been able to run is Ground Control 2, but that doesn't work on windows 10 (possible a USB device issue). Unless you play a game with an anti cheat that explicitly deny Linux (the only one I know off the top of my head that does that is Fortnite) you are most likely good to go. I'm quite a performance/fps snobb, and I haven't found any game that runs worse on Linux either.

  • Funnily enough that is the exact situation I got. Parents started paying for Spotify almost 2 decades ago, and the great people they are have just kept it going since for me. I do have a YouTube premium (I know this is a bit frowned upon on Lemmy) sub going, but YouTube Music just doesn't quite function the way I want it to.

  • It's kinda offical but not quite. It's ported over and distributed by some Spotify engineers who wants to use it for Linux, but as far as I can tell, officially as a company Spotify don't support Linux as a platform. Source: https://www.spotify.com/us/download/linux/

  • Wow, that's a fantastic write up! Very cool to hear from someone who has used all the major platforms. I'm leaning towards Tidal, but they all seem to work quite well for everyone in here. I think what I'm going to do is dedicate a month to each service, write down my experiences with it, and go from there. Deezer has the free trial, so could start with that. Some other people in this thread has noted about the non-sorting of downloaded tracks and other questionable UI choices, so I'll keep an eye out for that.

    I didn't expect to find any native apps, even Spotify's client is an unoffical distribution, but I'm glad to hear they all have something available at least. I'm intrigued by Cider, seems like one hell of a project.

  • I hear you on the algorithm stuff. I normally find most my music through more organic means anyway, like soundtracks in games and movies, word of mouth from friends, or youtube/twitch. So maybe discoverability wouldn't be so bad for me if I do decide to go for a local collection at some point.

  • Having a local (well local as on my Jellyfin instance) might be an end goal for me. I have started buying and playing LPs recently, it's a good vibe to have it physically spinning next to me. I only really look for what I already know when I go into a record store, maybe time to expand when I next go into one.

  • Hm, yeah that sounds like a big missed market! I love tuning in to live DJ's on twitch sometimes. Would be really cool to have some of that directly in a streaming platform. Now you've made me really sad it's not a thing.

  • I have heard very good things about Apple Music to be fair. With them it's more about staying away from the big guys you know and give the smaller guys some room, although I generally trust Apple to be more on the decent sides of things than other large tech companies.

    While it's not off the board, I'm unlikely to try them out 🙂

  • Hm, the the absolute least scary option would be to try it out on a live bootable USB. That's not difficult, it's the first step before installing pretty much any modern distro.

    The second least but slightly more technically advanced would be to get a second hard drive and install Linux on that completely separately from your windows install. The technical part here is your BIOS will have a default boot drive and will boot from there on start up, so you would need to interrupt the boot and select which OS you want.

    I personally went with the second option, as dual booting from the same had drive is a minefield with windows, as they have a tendency to wreck the Linux boot part. But when I swapped, I set the default boot to my Linux hard drive to get in the habit of using it, and if I ever need anything from windows nowadays (only VR) I select that on boot.