roux

joined 1 year ago
[–] roux@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Meanwhile my dumbass has been trying to be even remotely functional with programming. A degree and a software dev job later I still don't think I really get it.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Tbf I've had a similar thing happen like 6 years ago. I've been using Linux still but at the time I didn't have much going on that system outside of a few games so it just turned into a long reinstall weekend. I forget exactly what happened but I also had another issue where I tried to install KDE Plasma desktop environment and it completely nuked my system. Idk if it was a user error or what.

I'm still a Linux fanboy but it's not without its own set of issues. I try to be a bit more careful in the terminal after all that and I haven't had any major issues since. I do need to do a fresh install sometime in the near future though.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago

Stuff like East Anti Cheat needs to have support for Linux essentially turned on. Otherwise the game won't run even if WINE/Proton can run the game fine. I think a lot of devs don't bother because they don't know Linux in case OS specific support might be required, and the market was fairly small up until the Steam Deck came out.

For an example. A few weeks after the Steam Deck came out, suddenly Apex Legends and a few other games could be run on Linux without anti-cheat issues. The developers just turned on a switch and made a new build essentially.

For the longest of time is Linux users were mostly just told that people use Linux to cheat in games and that's not really the case.

Overall though there is no real reason why anti-cheat software shouldn't be able to work on Linux.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

Not gonna lie some of the expansion mods I've seen scare me. I do wanna get back to Factorio if this DSP kick ever finishes though.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

That's fair. I watched the whole trilogy and honestly it just becomes a slog. They took a novel idea and tried to franchise it and I think that wasn't the best idea. Hardcore Henry is still very much superior.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

If you like cheesy b horror and practical effect demo there is one called Hotel Inferno that is first person continual shot similar to Hardcore Henry but it can be a bit rough at times. The English dubbing isn't great for example. At times the practical effects almost feels like the finisher kills from Doom 2016.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

Another movie that essentially tells the same story in a different setting is Snowpiercer. Both movies are great imo.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 year ago

I have the luxury of working from home so fidgeting isn't an issue. I tend to not play with them when working as much since I end up spending most of my time picking them up off the floor. Also when you are on a phone call and hit your knuckles and blurt out an "ouch" it makes it a bit awkward lol.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 year ago (2 children)

If someone else didn't say it I was gonna recommend DSP. It's galactic scale Factorio in space and 3D. If Factorio automation and interstellar logistics sound fun then get this game.

For late game do e of the hardcore players take ticks per second and such into consideration so there is a sort of meta think to the game with that regard. You can still just slap automation chains together and get the job done tho. I was getting 15 fps at end game with a RTX 3060 lol.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 53 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

The government providing a baseline existence for it's people is like super fucking dangerous.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

I've been on Mint with Cinnamon for the last 4 years or so but before that was a long stint of Ubuntu/Gnome after distro hopping. I am considering moving upstream to Debian or switching back to Arch in the future.

[–] roux@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Another sites I forgot to mention since I was half asleep when wrote that was kbfans. I have seen people that get into the hobby to the point of building their own get kits from them or Novelkeys. Both offer hotswap PCBs which means you don't need to solder the switches and can change them if you want. They offer 60% and TenKeyless which is probably where most people aim for so I think it's a good place to start.

Also if you want keycaps, Amazon, Ali and Banggood sell knockoff copycaps(lol) of a lot of designs for a lot cheaper. Look for "double shot" or "dye-subbed". Those are gonna last and you won't get fading legends like on cheap boards.

And don't get too overwhelmed with switch choice paralysis. If you break it down to linear, tactile, and clicky for feel and then light, medium, and heavy spring weight, it gets a bit easier to navigate to what you might want. Tactile will have a light bump or a heavy bump(popular in the last few years) but other than that, they offer testers and samples.

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