Ah, my bad. I'm so used to it all that I can't help but spit out jargon with no context sometimes 😅
I'm referring to apps like Sonarr, which basically keeps an eye on torrent/usenet providers and downloads episodes for you automatically. So you tell it you want some show, optionally set the quality you want it at, and it takes care of everything so that the episodes just show up on Jellyfin/Plex after they air and it grabs them. There's also Radarr for movies and a whole bunch of related ones.
Right? We've been getting so many reverse engineered ports in general. Off the top of my head there's Zelda OoT, Super Mario 64, Jak 1 and now this one. I'm sure I'm forgetting some.
Yeah, I'm wondering the same and also figure the requirements will be pretty significant. Still, pretty happy with things like this and Home Assistant's recent work on local voice assistants.
I was going to say that sounds like quite the elegant setup you ended up with, and in a pre docker world? Straight up crazy in my eyes. Really puts into perspective how I take all the tolling around containerization for granted nowadays.
Been playing LunarLux, delightful little game. It's like the people behind it were like "What if we take the Mega Man Battle Network aesthetics, general vibes and battle system but have combat be turn based and get the player to dodge attacks like in Undertale sometimes?"
I have tons of nostalgia for the MMBN games so this doesn't come from an unbiased place but man, they've nailed the sheer Saturday morning cartoon energy the originals had down to a T. The scale is a lot smaller but I can't wait to see what the studio comes up with next if they decide to follow up on this!
I know it's not exactly what you're looking for but I've explored some (free) options myself with good deliverability and ended up settling on smtp2go. Tied it to my domain, and it allows me to send 1000 emails/month hassle free. Everything else I looked into either wouldn't get delivered or costed way more I thought was worth for simple notifications.
I'll echo the other comment and say gotify could be a great option as well, I only stuck with email because it's easier on less tech literate family I provide services to and whatnot.
That's not what I'm talking about, Steam's recommended prices don't follow exchange rates because they actually try to take every country's economic reality into account.
See here, the latest suggested conversion for 60 USD is actually 162 BRL which honestly is pretty reasonable.
That feels like the physical version of how most publishers treat Steam regional pricing suggestions here, and I imagine in a lot of other developing countries.
For reference, the suggested equivalent of 60 USD was something close to 180 BRL last I checked but you'd be hard pressed to find an actual AAA game for less than 250~300 BRL. Not coincidentally, that's also in the neighborhood of a straight USD to BRL conversion at the usual rates.
Bazzite, a gaming-oriented immutable distro with up to date Fedora packages and kernel, a lot of the kernel patches you'd want for gaming, automatic daily updates in the background, the option of installing the Nix package manager and Distrobox out of the box. They even have a Steam Deck version that works just like stock UI/UX wise but with all the added goodies.
Plus, on rpm-ostree/ublue-os as a whole, it just amazes me to no end you can basically look at deploying a distro as if it's a git repo these days. Wanna try Gnome? Rebase to the corresponding image and reboot, your data is still there. Don't like it? Quickly rollback or just pick the previous entry on GRUB. Incredible stuff, I'm sticking with those if I can help it for the foreseeable future.
As someone from a developing country, I'm painfully aware of how most big publishers choose to ignore recommended prices and just go with a straight USD conversion most of the time so I can only hope this doesn't screw them even further.
I really wish it was viable for Valve to enforce a ceiling on suggested prices or something along those lines, it's about the only way I see that ever changing. Well, that, or everyone just becoming a full-time sailor, I suppose!
As someone who's really into gaming and gives NVIDIA on Linux a try now and then, the one thing that really bugs me is DLDSR isn't available at all, nor is plain, non AI DSR. The latter isn't hard to replicate, but I miss the extra bang for your buck of the DL variant.
Granted, mine is a very niche use case but I rely on it a lot since it works great on older titles or ones with bad or no native AA and such.
As someone who struggled quite a bit to learn Nix, I'd say start small. Install Nix the package manager on any old distro you're familiar with and play with standalone Home Manager. Enable one program here and there, have it manage your shells and CLI apps, set environment variables and write files. It's something you can immediately see the effects of and feels pretty rewarding, so I think it's a great place to start.
I also happened upon this video series a few days ago and it's a great resource, easy to parse and walks you through not only the basics but how to look around and investigate in the REPL when you want to figure something out.
Pretty much the one upside of living where I do is ISPs couldn't care less haha
Appreciate the heads-up anyway, very much relevant to a good portion of the folks who might stumble upon my comment :)