Apex works flawlessly, without having to do any manual tweaking.
Afaik there is a patched wine version that still lets you play LoL, but with Fortnite you’re sol.
Apex works flawlessly, without having to do any manual tweaking.
Afaik there is a patched wine version that still lets you play LoL, but with Fortnite you’re sol.
If your guest OS is Linux, you can use Virgl to get much better OpenGL performance in the VM.
Anyone here who uses this regularly? I’ve been using FL Studio for the past 10 years, how does ardour fare in comparison?
Afaik the free version has no support for h264 whatsoever on Linux. I think you will have to transcode.
There’s an open issue somewhere on GitHub (Valve’s CS2 repo), it seems to be an issue with SDL, which Counter Strike uses to interface with pipewire. Afaik no one is quite sure why the delay builds up, but it doesn’t seem like an issue with pipewire itself.
I wonder if the rate switching will change anything for those of us who like to have their sample rate at 48k and currently suffer from gradually growing audio delay in CS2.
While I don’t agree with OP’s view that the world as a whole is anti-intellectual, I also wouldn’t assume that these people don’t exist at all. I’ve personally had interactions with people who thought less of me or others for having a higher level of education, and (at least overtly) not in the sense that they were jealous. It was more of a general antipathy against people who know things / enjoy to learn, because they saw them as arrogant etc.
But this is probably more an example of tribalism.
WineD3D translates to OpenGL. Assuming you’re using Linux, it’s as easy as running your programs in wine without DXVK.
Don’t expect stellar performance though.
While not community-developed per se, the RISC-V processor architecture is completely open, in contrast to all other architectures which are widely deployed, such as x86, AMD64 or ARM.
I’ve been using Nextcloud docker for quite some time, updated it countless times, have never had any problems whatsoever.
Ah yes, the remote desktop protocol protocol
For a little perspective:
Mastodon has an official way of migrating your account. It migrates your followers and accounts you follow, but doesn’t migrate your posts afaik.
Migrating posts (and comments in Lemmy’s case) would be iffy in itself imho and I’m also not sure whether that would even be possible since posts are synchronized to federated instances, where they would have to be updated too.
Yes. You can use the search function for that, just search for “community@instance”, so for example “worldnews@lemmy.world”.
Linking to communities from other instances works similarly, using a “!”: !worldnews@lemmy.world
You can also append this type of address to your instance url like so:
https://lemmy.ml/c/worldnews@lemmy.world
As long as another instance is not explicitly defederated (blocked) from yours, you can visit any community from any instance this way.
Firstly: I was partially wrong about what gets cached, see my original comment.
There is an open pull request which is meant to give some options regarding media serving. Right now it’s only a rough sketch though and does not implement a lot functionality.
I was wrong about what gets cached: media that is hosted directly on remote instances is not cached, while media from outside sources (imgur etc.) is cached and served from that cache.
So, from a small instance’s point of view, the best case scenario would be if everyone used Lemmy’s own media hosting exclusively. But that would, of course, greatly increase the storage requirements of larger instances.
I updated my comment as I was partially wrong about what gets cached.
I was partially wrong about what is cached and updated my comment.
That would be great to know, any chance you remember where you read that?
The obvious way would be to just not cache content locally and always link to the source instance. While this would concentrate the strain immensely, it would also greatly decrease the storage space used by all other instances.
There might also be other viable alternatives such as using a CDN and having it selectively cache content which is requested often etc.
~~As of now, Lemmy does not support either, though. ~~
Edit: I want to clarify that I was partially wrong - Lemmy only locally caches content which is hosted on outside sites. It does (should?) not cache content that was directly uploaded to a Lemmy instance and just embeds the source media.
Strange, I’ve had little problems with Space Engineers and protondb mostly seems to agree.