After spending hours on shooters and strategy games involving a lot of thought, it's nice to hop into something therapeutic like powerwash simulator. I found it to be one of my favourite games, alongside the Portal series and Superluminal.
theshatterstone54
No joke, that's the main reason I've barely played it. Even with the built in tutorial and with Distrotube's guide on 0AD I still feel a bit lost and overwhelmed
So....
2.0 was a switch to QT6
and
2.1.0 brings us Wayland? Very exciting! Definitely will check it out (as a full session), as I always pick apps from either XFCE or LXQT for my tiling window manager set up. I've been using Thunar lately, though I'm open to switching back to pcmanfm if I want to.
What do you do when the check is not there for some games? Is there an alternative because the bug you're describing is a thing I've been dealing with on many occasions
Nate Graham loves kebabs confirmed
This blog is what got me to give Void a proper shot! Currently on it and I'm enjoying it!
Yeah, it was about my concerns with Void.
I tried it but it was too much for me. It's not my thing, but it's a very interesting and very cool project and I have nothing but respect towards the Bedrock Linux team for what they have achieved.
Great article, but 2 things stood out for me.
First,
The distro has been around since 2002, so it’s not that old even though it predates Ubuntu by a couple of years.
I don't know, to me, a distro that's nearly 22 years old is pretty old.
I mean, I'd say Arch is an old distro, having started in 2001. I'd also say Ubuntu and Mint are quite old distros at this point, having begun in 2005 and 2006 respectively.
I'd say something like Garuda, which started 4 years ago in 2020 can be considered new.
And second,
There is a mention that donations will now be tax-exempt in the US, as they are in the EU, but what about other nations, specifically the UK?
Really? That's impressive!
Ouch. Too relatable. Far too relatable. At first, it was Arch, until I found out about NixOS. Then, it was NixOS until I was having issues related to the immutability aspect of it. Then, I was going back and forth between them, neither being perfect. Later, I found Tumbleweed but that wasn't even close to what I needed. It was Fedora, with a bunch of Copr Repos, that I've been on for 2 months now, that made me stop hopping as it really had it all. But I read an article about Void about a week ago, and it's now weighing on my mind. Will the sacrifices involved with running Void, be matched by the advantages of it? I'm honestly not sure.
Any reason why yould have it in .bash_local over .bashrc? I use zsh but even when I used bash or fish, I'd add to my $PATH via .bashrc and config.fish respectively.