You definitely should, it is lightyears improved
XPost3000
Common proprietary L
I know you say that as a joke but I wouldn't be surprised if the Bethesda splash screen genuinely had some actual performance cost
Another .ml user here, and yeah it looks like it
It'd honestly suck to lose beehaw again, it's such a standout server with a really lovely community
But if the devs and the technology just can't keep up, then I guess there isn't much that we can do
We still can't even block instances yet, as far as I'm aware
Yeah there's a decent ton of them out there, each player can find the one that resonates with them!
Something I think worth doing is searching "in 40 rhythm games" on YouTube to get a quick compilation of a bunch of unique rhythm games , and importantly it gives a little preview of their gameplay, usually at a high level
Rhythm Games in general, but specifically osu!mania taught me that I can, like, actually get good at completely new stuff no matter how much I suck at it to begin with
It also taught me that I really like Hardcore EDM, before hand I wouldn't really listen to music cuz I wasn't sure exactly what kind of music I was drawn to
I'd recommend reading Wikipedia
More content than you could possibly read, short reads typically, you learn stuff, and you can make games out of it
A game I like to play is to come up with 2 completely unrelated things, start on thing 1, and see if you can get to thing 2 on Wikipedia in 6 tabs or less, using Wikipedia links only
Teacher: "You can't hear text"
Random Lemmy Comment:
Yeah, that's what I'm getting at, proprietary software on Linux is just a step forward towards a fully FOSS future
For the most part, there aren't many professional fields that have a good FOSS option, so in the meantime their only option is to keep using the industry standard until a good alternative matures like Blender has
At the very least, people would have the freedom to not use microsoft or apple while still working professionally in their respective industry, so that's more free overall
Why not both? I don't see how proprietary software on Linux will slow down FOSS at all, and it'll only bring more users to Linux who otherwise have to use windows for their software, so overall more FOSS users in the community
And programs like Blender have already matured to a professional level, so I'm pretty optimistic that other FOSS apps will eventually follow, too
The 99th article about eco friendly bio-degradable plastic that'll never see large scale use:
And LMMS