I've had a lot of thinkpads and currently use an ideapad flex 5. I prefer the smaller form factor for a portable machine I take travelling or out to biz meetings etc. The autorotate and touchscreen work great in Debian with gnome-shell out of the box. No pinch-to-zoom but I believe that works on KDE plasma out of the box.
gila
In the parts that are actually hot, the new builds are generally off-white brick or double-brick buildings with white Colorbond roofs (an Aus brand of corrugated steel)
You do get the odd house with a dark roof, and when you go past them everyone points and laughs at how silly and uncomfortable they must be.
I really liked enter the gungeon. It was one of the first roguelites I played. It's fairly basic in terms of mechanics compared to some newer entries in the genre. But it's just good arcadey fun. Bonus is that it runs on a lot of systems. It's still one of my go to's for plane trips or other offline scenarios
It can become surprisingly complicated with axial deadzone settings, but that's not really important to understand. The simple concept is it's the zone in which the stick is moved but no change in movement is registered in-game. The complication that is added is mostly related to more precise calculation of where that zone is
Metroid Prime series are more "action games" than FPS' per se, but they are must-plays if you haven't, & might scratch that itch. There's a switch remaster of the first game, none yet for Prime 2 or 3 but it's likely they'll come out leading up to the release of the recently-announced Prime 4
Moving a joystick is fundamentally different to moving a mouse. With a joystick there is a spring constantly acting to center it - no equivalent force when using a mouse. So you need to get a feel for estimating that force and accurately counteracting it in various gameplay scenarios. That's a completely different "muscle" to have a memory of vs. using a mouse I think
Also, modern controller joysticks generally are not great. Most have medium to large deadzones in the center by default. I'd recommend reducing them for more responsiveness. It comes with the tradeoff of being more susceptible to stick drift. But that isn't something you should be afraid of. It's a physical impossibility for their design to not wear over time. I'd recommend recalibrating and adjusting settings regularly. At the end of the day, replacing joystick modules only requires screws (no soldering) so it's cheap and relatively easy.
If you're really serious you could get some hall effect joystick modules. That way you wouldn't need to recalibrate often and could keep a consistently small deadzone setting without encountering drift. i.e. default settings from like dualshock 2, when stick drift was just as apparent but people hadn't gone crazy over it yet.
Minecraft would be fine for learning fps movement in a relaxed setting.
Losslesscut is what you want for this. It's basic and concatenates without re-encoding. And it's open source (as is handbrake)
So that the timestamp adjustment can be propagated via uploader or user comments across YouTube clients on all platforms... i.e. to avoid having to hardcode each adjustment for each ad on each video on every client
Wouldn't that need to be done via some kind of API for cross-platform compatibility? An API which could be exploited to detect ad segments?
Xcloud streaming does indeed work very well via Greenlight. I'm also using GeForce Now combined with PC game pass via gfn-electron so I can play Diablo. Very happy with it. On debian bookworm btw
How do I defederate from posts complaining about lemmy.ml admins being tankies? Hasn't the instance required manual signup approval for the whole last year? Complaints about it being a flagship instance and the resulting bad look for the platform are total non-sequitur. The problem is absolutely, totally, without caveat, solved by lemmy's blocking functionality. If you don't like that they created popular communities, tough titties. At the core of the issue is that these complaints are pushing a decentralized platform to conform to their worldview. That just isn't how it works.
/rant
Same shell, mine has Intel CPU though