Crysis was single threaded so single core clock speed was the bottleneck. It remained a benchmark for so long mostly because after it's release multicore systems became the norm.
I haven't played much Minecraft since The End was a relatively new addition to the game.
Am I understanding right that this has a low percentage chance of triggering on every tick but will release a bunch of angry Enderman when it finally does?
I can tell the time perfectly well unless someone asks me what time it is. Then my brain is completely useless and I just have to twist my wrist around awkwardly to show them.
Linux has been easier to install than Windows for a while now, particularly with all the goofy hacks you have to pull out just to make an offline account on Win11.
IPv6 firewalls should, by default, offer similar levels of security to NAT
I think you're probably right. We had decades of security experts saying that NAT is not a firewall and everyone on the planet treated it like one anyway. Now we're overexposed for a no-NAT IPV6 internet.
Am I crazy? I'm not seeing "Organic Maps" on Fdroid at all. Do I need to add a specific repo?
Edit: Okay yes. I had to include 'other antifeatures' which it did warn me about. I hadn't adjusted that setting beyond the default and assumed I didn't need to go enable those things.
I've been testing Bazzite out on a variety of hardware. It's very easy to setup and required no additional fiddling at all to get working, even with an Nvidia card which is the usual source of Linux gaming frustrations.
If you're used to the limitations of the Steam Deck OS and haven't had any issues there then you should have a good experience with Bazzite which is presented in a very similar way even if it's a little different under the hood.
Bazzite is basically exactly this already. If you have an AMD gpu you can boot straight into steam. The desktop mode uses KDE like the Steam Deck and the package manager makes it much easier to layer in additional system packages which is kind of a pain on the Deck. Plus there are some additional gaming specific tweaks popularized by tools like cryoutility included by default.
I've been running a tabletop campaign for Scum & Villainy which is very much in the Space Opera/Western category. It's been a really fun and evocative setting to game in.
Alternatively what you're describing sounds like SponsorBlock but for podcasts. You probably wouldn't have to rehost the actual audio files to accomplish this, just have a podcast client/addon that allows user submissions for ad segments and a database somewhere that can host the metadata for ad breaks.
Biggest issue is probably that you're probably building or forking an existing podcast app to do it, and some podcasts dynamically insert ads so it's possible that peoples downloaded files could have different ad segments/times.
War is manly and good! Except also bad which is why men and soldiers must be revered and maintain a hold on all positions of power.