

For the most part, yeah


For the most part, yeah


Funny, I just saw the video of Mental Outlaw talking about TuxMate. How do you think your project compares to this?
It was pretty much plug-and-play.
I downloaded the OpenWrt image (about 6 MB in size) and navigated to the firmware update page on my router’s web interface. Selected the image and it took roughly 5-10 minutes to install. All I had to do was update the default SSIDs and its passwords to match what I had before.
I installed OpenWrt on my router this week


Not that I am doubting you, but I’d really like to see a source for this. I would like to learn more about it.
Unpausable and unskippable cutscenes
Glad to hear that!
A bit of Arch Wiki and Podman’s own documentation.
I usually set :Z at the end of volume mounts and it fixes the permission issues. Now that I think about it, all my Quadlets are using this option.


They are talking about ray tracing, which has been quite underwhelming with RADV compared to Windows.
Ivy Wallet. While it is unmaintained as of recently, it is pretty much feature-complete and I really like its UI.


Yeah, I deliberately wrote it like that trying to be vague. Don’t know if it was a good idea though. 😅


I played it a few years ago, so I don’t remember if it had an in-game percentage counter.
Without spoiling much: the game has multiple very distinct endings and depending on your playstyle may require multiple playthroughs.
I can say that it is one the best RPGs I have ever played. Nearly every single choice you make has a very noticeable impact on the world.
I use it to track my bad habits. So far, I have avoided distrohopping for nearly half a year. 😅


I have been using Linux for a few years now I have never seen someone say “arch btw” unironically. I swear, memers do more damage to its perception.


The unfortunate thing is that OEMs don’t really have an incentive to ship Linux-powered systems.
Have you ever noticed how vendors who ship computers with Linux often do so at the same or greater cost than Windows? I believe I have heard somewhere that Microsoft subsidizes OEMs for shipping with Windows, which is scummy but Linux can’t really compete with this.
I believe they are the same person who made gpu-screen-recorder (Nvidia ShadowPlay clone). They are obviously very talented and I think it would be better to spend that effort improving Wayland compositors instead.
Still, I wonder what their motivations are as this page does not mention that.
Homebrew itself and the packages it downloads are all on GitHub. So, I guess it is safe. Still, it is probably best to stick with trusted packages and not download random stuff from there.
Homebrew is a very popular package manager for Mac OS, but it is available on Linux, too. It installs packages without root and completely isolated (meaning no conflicts, not sandboxing) from the rest of the system.
I use it on Fedora and in the past used it on Ubuntu derivatives to install packages not available in distro repositories (such as starship).
It can also be used in old LTS distros to have newer versions of packages (for example, I used it to download latest version of neovim on Pop!_OS).
You can also use it to avoid layering small packages to the base image (which extends update times) on Bazzite and similar distros.



This, was a busy year. Silksong very much carried my Steam Deck usage.
Devil May Cry 5.
I tried to start it a year ago, but decided to play the rest of the series first. Combined with Silksong being released, I have just managed to start playing DMC5 again.