swizzle9144

joined 1 year ago
[–] swizzle9144@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 11 months ago

Raiden Shogun in 78 wishes, won 50/50!

Tighnari's new Quickbloom team with her, Baizhu, and Furina slaps XwX

I wish we had more fully-animated cutscenes like that

[–] swizzle9144@lemmy.blahaj.zone 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

I may be high on copium, but I wish we could get all the primogens we'd otherwise obtain by completing the maximum number of daily commissions permittable per patch via an in-game message that expires after a patch is over; that daily, battle-pass missions were scraped and the cumulative amount of points that completing them grants was distributed across weekly ones; and that the resin cap was increased to a week's worth of resin, if not removed entirely in favour of the distribution of fragile resin by mail.

3-star Gladiator, 5-star Exile.. What's HoYo cooking?

Thanks a lot! This clarifies it for me, and if I understand correctly, it shouldn't be a concern for me since my laptop isn't used for data-intensive computing.

 

I'm shopping for a new NVMe SSD drive for my laptop and with the second deciding factor being Linux compatibility, I'd looked up the names of specific drives in the source code of Linux and discovered that their controllers have quirks that have to be worked around.

Now, I figured out more or less how quirks affecting one of the controllers impact its functionality under Linux, but there's another controller that I have a trouble understanding how disabling the aforementioned command limits the functionality of, if at all; therefore I'd like to ask you all, under what circumstances is the command used by a host and can disabling it lower the performance or power efficiency of an impacted controller/drive?

To be clear, the quirk workaround I'm talking a about is NVME_QUIRK_DISABLE_WRITE_ZEROES.

Understandable.

Still, I just hope iOS 15 will be supported—I like to get the most mileage out of my older devices.

[–] swizzle9144@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Which will be the lowest supported iOS version?

Edit: Please correct me if I'm wrong here's a trend in iOS app development where all new apps have arbitrarily high iOS requirements when they could run on older iOS versions just fine. I would love to use Voyager but if it goes down the same route, I won't be able to :(

I know about the PWA but it can stop working for me over time when the old release of WebKit on my phone eventually becomes incompatible with it