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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/)NA
Posts
1
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459
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • I almost bought OGSL many years ago too until I realized there was no damn chance I'd need the sharing functions anyhow lol.... But same deal happened to me with aCar. Was a great app for tracking all my car mileage, service, expenses, fill-ups, etc, but even though I paid for lifetime unlock, that's no longer valid. Such a crock of shit.

  • Same, I do that. I have it integrated into Todoist which Alexa is also tied into, so I can manage it from voice commands or the app all the same. I don't need a very complicated set of features in the lists themselves, but I've found that if I can use voice commands while cooking, I'm far more likely to remember to buy things I need as I use them up.

  • Not all distros are that hard to get into. I personally don't care one way or another as long as you're comfortable with your OS, but it'd be worth giving Linux a try at some point. Mint Linux or PopOS! are both good options for entry level Linux (but not limited to just entry level).

  • Sure, Arch is very much a distro that you only will install what you want and none of the extras until you find a need. There's none of the extra bloat you get in most distros. And if you want to install something that isn't part of a distro package, you can install it via the Arch Users Repository (AUR) which has a combination of both binaries and source packages that will compile at install.

    And most importantly all of that is easy to maintain, including the AUR using either pacman (the package manager) or yay (a wrapper for pacman that can update not only distro packages but anything in AUR). The worst part about installing projects manually is usually you have to do all the work of keeping it up to date, with but yay, it's just "yay", say yes a few times, and you're generally done for everything.

  • Yeah, I'm not a novice to Linux in general, but it was my first time using Arch. Was testing it out after many years of admin of Ubuntu servers and then trying OpenSUSE for gaming. I don't think I could ever leave Arch now, it's just so easy to maintain and I finally get the hype.

  • Sorry, no I didn't mean it could play Steam games without Link. I was just saying that there is precedent for calling it a platform of its own because of how Quest works. Sure, on Steam it's going to be based on the OS running it, but VR is a more unique experience than the OS being the platform.

  • I found out about 2 months ago I had a dead stick because of my Arch install. I kept having data integrity problems and thought my NVMe was dying. And then the other drive was having the same issues. I had reinstalled Arch so many times during this that I memorized ALL the steps from start to end. I really wish I had tested RAM earlier, but was so determined to believe it was the drives.

  • Lemmy isn't supporting Nazis, you're being downvoted because making accusations without sources is just yelling into the wind. "Just Google it" and "do your own research" is synonymous in practice and adds nothing to the conversation and only is rumormill level gossip.

    Provide links to some sources if you have some legit concerns, because that's definitely news to me.

  • Essentially "Remake" was the subtitle of the game, rather than a term like remaster. It was subtle until the end, but you're remaking the story's timeline. It's a sequel, not a remaster or reimagining of the original.

    Also, yeah you're definitely high. Like damn dude.