I use sunshine and moonlight. It's designed for games but works far better because of it, as in if it's good enough for games, the latency will be far better than other RDP protocols.
It doesn't do clipboard sharing though.
I use sunshine and moonlight. It's designed for games but works far better because of it, as in if it's good enough for games, the latency will be far better than other RDP protocols.
It doesn't do clipboard sharing though.
I've recently started replacing most of my shell usage with org mode and babel, along with GitHub copilot and similar LLM backed tools it's like autocomplete on steroids
For sniping, mostly. Not sure if eidolons are the same as before, but it's really hard to aim at the joints using joysticks without motion controllers
Drag a selection box around it, or use ctrl. Or right click.
I've played something like 800 hours on the Nintendo switch, it was fine except for some of the lock puzzles which are way easier on mouse.
You gotta use motion controls though (well depending on the frame I guess)
I use yay
so I just go to ~/.cache/yay/sunshine-git
after the failed build and change the PKGBUILD, then use makepkg -si
to build and install it.
You can use the patch
command to apply the diff.
If you're a tinkerer it's kind of addicting. I thought I'd give it a try just to see what it was like, and ended up staying up all night customizing it, and now about a month later I don't really want to go back to KDE (been using KDE for almost 20 years)
I didn't measure performance, I was talking about battery life, but no, I didn't do any benchmarks.
Even Intel has these. I think this patch set goes a bit further and takes into account the silicon lottery differences between cores (according to the patch series)
I'm using the patch set on my framework 7840u and didn't notice a difference though, though this is really YMMV.
This is a problem with a ton of electronics nowadays, and unfortunately the general solution is pretty low tech -- just tape over it or they sell specialized stickers for this too.
Proxmox is a lot more user friendly than virt-manager (yes I've used both, but I just started using proxmox).
I don't know all the details, but isn't it set up to be some type of not for profit corporation to prevent that? Though I guess OpenAI is also not profit, but I was hoping it'd be more like Signal to stave off enshittification