Ask Elon Musk after he "improved" Twitter ๐คญ
teawrecks
Not a fan of the early windows style, but otherwise "Memphis" looks coolest to me. Reminds me of early nickelodeon. The crowd in the background of What Would You Do was 100% this style.
"Duuuude, I'm big on shrooms fr"
"๐ฒ๐ก"
I don't know what Reznor and Cash's relationship was, but that has to feel so surreal for Reznor. You never see older artists cover newer ones in general, let alone such a legendary country artist cover a young alternative rock artist. If I were Reznor, that would be the thing that lets me die happy.
Looks like GoL has a plot over time. Linux adoption is starting to hockey stick, definitely above linear growth, this is getting exciting! I would guess, if it hits somewhere around 5-10% and keeps this hockey stick shape, we'll really start to see the game industry justify giving it more attention.
This will come with both good and bad, I expect it's only a matter of time before some game tries a native kernel level anti-cheat, aka root kit, on Linux.
What does "perform slightly faster" mean? Boot time? App loading? CPU perf?
It's normal for it to heat up under load, but it's not normal for it to be under load 24/7 indefinitely.
Where do you stash the chandelier?
But you could come up with a believable reason for multiplayer. (Ex. Maybe the devs decided their servers wouldn't scale and had to move to Sony's, but those require users to have a Sony account.)
For single player, there's not even a hypothetical excuse. They just want you to be inconvenienced for their own gain.
He can spend the time (ghost) writing his book about how unfair the fake news media is toward him. He could literally title it "My Struggle" and his base still wouldn't get it.
On Linux it would be ideal if they could use pipewire to have separate audio streams for the game, a mic input, and all other PC audio. This is what I currently do using obs' replay buffer for clipping.
The only way I know of to fix the bios time issue when dual booting with windows is using the cmdline on Linux, or regedit on windows.