Open world RPGs need a standard feature whereby you can transfer your current clothing stats to any other equivalent piece of clothing in your inventory
BananaTrifleViolin @ BananaTrifleViolin @lemmy.world 帖子 4评论 941加入于 2 yr. ago
This is awesome. Have to admit though i've been on Leemy too much today - I was expecting it to drop an Epstein joke. So many game memes around that today!
This feels more like an anti-dad joke. The kind of joke that would tear a family apart. It'd cause arguments around the table about what a joke is, and probably ultimately end up in divorce for the parents and a 20 year schism between father and child that would only end when forced to reconnect after a family tragedy.
Everyone is already being tracked and monitored by the tech and advertising companies all the time. But there are ways around it.
You can start with your OS - the main Linux distros do not track or monitor your use. And on Linux you can install anything you want. There are privacy respecting browsers - Firefox is far more private than any of the Chrome based browsers, and Firefox forks like Librewolf are even more secure and private. You can also use your own firewalls, VPNs or access Internet alternatives like Tor or Freenet.
You can do much of this on Windows but it's a bit like trying to use a sieve to carry water - no mater how small you make the holes it's still a sieve. Linux is more like a bucket - you can put holes in it if you want to but it's not leaking everything by default.
Linux is not a single OS - it's whole structure is decentralised and fragmented.
Linux actually a kernel (the thing that bridges between the hardware and the software) which is paired with a group of basic software called GNU Utilities that make up the basic OS. Then there are lots of other software on top of that such as the graphics engine (X or Wayland) and the desktop environments (such as KDE or Gnome) and then all the software (video players, music players, office apps, steam and games etc).
All of this core software is open source and licensed to be free and independent. If one component were to be subverted anyone can fork it and make a free version again. There is some proprietary stuff but most of this has free alternatives.
As it is not centralised and instead a collection of lots of projects, it is difficult to both control it or suppress it. Anyone can compile the kernel, anyone can compile the basic apps or any other components. The source is freely available si anyone can audit it.
As a user you have total control over what is installed. If you want a totally private and secure system you can do it.
As it's not owned by any big company or government you have total choice what is on your system. You can "secretly" and privately use Linux without fear of governments or organisations knowing you're using it.
Linux is not perfect but it's is light years ahead of Windows in terms of privacy and security. It's nigh on impossible for Linux to disappear or be subverted - it's everywhere and it's freely available. No single group or organisation can suppress all the versions to force you to use their "approved" version.
Even if you remain skeptical about Linux long term, one thing is certain. Right now Windows is spying on you, harvesting your data, and using that to make money from advertisers, profile you for marketers and try to sell you more Microsoft goods. Linux will not. So even if it's just for today, Linux is by far the better option.
I think he first thing to check is, is the OS actually shutting down? Or is it appearing to shut down but actually staying on and running down the battery due to some error. I.e. Wheb you come back to it, the laptop just happens to be off as the battery finally ran out some.poijt over night
I'd check the log files first to see what happens when you shut down. Is debian shutting down or is it stuck with one process running? Does the system off time match the time you sent the shutdown message?
The other thing to consider here is not that the battery is running down but rather that it is not charging up properly. The OS may be telling you the battery is full when in fact it's not so you're actually always teetering on the edge of 0%. I.e. Maybe youve stimbked across a bug with power management in Debian with your hardware.
Given you had no issues with Fedora, maybe use a USB stick with Fedora on it to boot the laptop up and see what it says about battery. Does it match what Debian told you? If not then maybe close to diagnosing the problem. If they do match have to keep looking.
Just cover it in some chocolate sauce. That'll make it look better.
Unfortunately I think some of this perception is an example of the echo chamber problem of social media.
If you're in the politics and news echo chambers you see horrendous toxicity all the time. But if you're in hobby groups and interest groups that have nothing to do with politics it's generally not toxic in my experience.
I'm in both and there are loads of positive and kind communities and people around. I fear the moderators in particular have an understandably skewed view as they have to trudge through the toxic shit every day and protect a lot of the rest of us from it.
I think there is something to be said for more defederation of entire instances where toxic cuktures are allowed to thrive, even if they also happen to host more positive communities too. Those communities need to move and the priority for the Threadiverse tech needs to be enabling movement of communities as easily and painlessly as possible so the toxic areas can be left to fester on their own.
Open source software such as Ansible, Puppet, Salt etc deployed on a custom Linux server with networking hardware.
If you want an all in one system / support package then search for Ansible orchestrator for example; there are plenty of EU based companies selling their own network kit configured for Ansible.
All of these can be run on any Linux distro. Dropbox is probably a better choice than Google Drive as Google drive doesn't have an official Linux app (but you can get it working beyond just using it in a Web browser if its a must).
I'd go.with Linux Mint as it's well supported but any point release distro will serve your needs well. For example Fedora KDD or OpenSuSE Leap, Debian etc. I wouldn't recommend Ubuntu.
I personally generally recommend Mint as a good starting distro. It is widely used, which means lots of support readily found online. It also has some of the benefits of Ubuntu without having the Snap forced on users. It also generally works well on a wide range of systems including lower powered systems due to its selection of desktops.
Your laptop is decent and I'd personally be running a slick desktop on that, specifically KDE. But alot of that comes down to personal preferences, and Mint isn't the best KDE desktop as it's not a main desktop for it (although it is available).
However once you get to grips with the basics of Linux I think other distros offer better more focused benefits for different user groups. There are lots of choices such as Gaming focused distros, rolling release vs point release distros, slow long term projects like Debian vs bleeding edge focused projects, immutable systems etc.
I personally use OpenSuSE Tumbleweed because it's cutting edge, but well tested prior to updates, with a good set of system tools in YaST, and decently ready for gaming and desktop use. I also like that it is European. But that may not be a good fit for your specific use case. Leap, the OpenSuSE point release distro would be better - a nice KDE desktop with a reliable release schedule and a focus on stability over cutting edge.
That's not entirely true. Snap is a good reason to avoid Ubuntu as you're not given the choice whether day to day apps like Firefox are a native app or snap app. You can only have snap versions. The lack of choice in having a slower less efficient version of apps forced on users without official alternatives is a good enough reason for people to recommend avoiding Ubuntu.
That is regardless of all the commercial and proprietary concerns people have.
That does not apply to Ubuntu based system like Mint where users are given choices and still benefit from other aspects of the Ubuntu ecosystem.
Only caution on this is KDE has had significant improvements in each of it's point releases. Trixie is looking to launch with KDE 6.3.5 but latest is now 6.4.
It's always a balance between stability and latest release, but KDE has had quite rapid improvement as it's still early in the 6 era. Having said that the it does feel like the changes now coming through are mainly polish and new features rather than fixing fundamental issues - so 6.3.5 might be a good base for Debian Trixie.
Been using KDE 6 on this device since last year without issue. The power profiles are present in the system tray and slider in the quick menu, so whatever that issue it's been fixed. I've been using Nobara and OpenSuSE but maybe it's an issue on LTS releases if they're on a point release where this was an issue?
The power setting is a very good shout though - KDE defaulted to Balanced setting for me and I needed to change to Performance to get good gaming experiences.
As far as I'm aware they all do. It's frustrating but I wouldn't let it stop you buying these. Microsoft has aggressive deals with OEMs, and it's pretty hard for manufacturers to avoid Windows due to it's dominance. But OEMs have big discount deals on licenses so in terms of the portion of your purchase that goes to Microsoft it should be small. I look at it as cutting into the profits of the OEM because I was happy with the devices price even if it'd come with no OS.
I immediately wiped Win11 off my PC and installed Linux.
I have the same device and have had no issues with drivers or games. I also wiped Win 11 and have Linux on there.
I started with Nobara and it worked immediately and been running with that for nearly 18 months. I have recently (as in this week) switched to OpenSuSE after my Nobara install had issues, and again gaming is fine.
I'm not sure about Mint or Kubuntu but I can't see why either would have issues. The drivers should be within the kernel; I haven't needed separate drivers. I used KDE on both Nobara and on OpenSUSE without issue.
As you've experienced, I been impressed with the level the graphics can get to. Largely medium settings at 1080p for many games. I have played Cyberpunk 2077 on this on a mix of low to medium settings.
This may be too basic question but you're not playing games at 4k are you? The desktop can be at 4k but the games need to be set to less. You should be able to play 3D games on it, and I'd expect Yakuza Zero to play fine. The device is good with a 4k desktop and 4k video, but 4k 3D games is way more of an ask and you need to bring games down to 1080 (or even 720p if you want to push up some of the other game options).
EDIT: BTW if you have a gaming desktop you can stream games to this miniPC in 4k. I switched to playing Cyperpunk via steam streaming and it looked incredible.
EDIT2: One thing that is generally important is to install gstreamer and available codecs. They categorise them as "Good", "Bad" and "Ugly". Often the "good" category codecs are installed but sometimes the more proprietary codes in the "ugly" category are not (they are "Ugly" due to their licenses but are still excellent quality). I don't believe it makes a difference to gaming but I certainly noticed issues with video. OpenSuSE doesn't install proprietary codecs by default. Nobara did (I think) but I'm not sure about Mint and Kubuntu's approachs.
EDIT 3: Just wanted to highlight another important point mentioned elsewhere in this thread by just_another_person@lemmy.world. KDE defaults to balanced power mode for me and that certainly does impact the GPU performance. You need to change it to Performance mode in the power settings. That can either be done from the "Power and Battery" area in the task tray or in the "Power Management" section of the KDE Settings app (near the bottom of the list in the "System" group).
Maybe I'm misunderstanding but wouldn't diffuse light be what it's going to be best at? While it'd be worse on a sunny day when there is an optimal single direction for the light to come in?
It's the opposite of a light house fresnel lens - instead of scattering the light source evenly out, it'll capture diffuse incoming rays from random directions better and concentrate it on the photovoltaic cell? However it would be at the cost of being able to capture direct sunlight efficiently as only some of the lens would ever be in the best position to capture the direct rays?
That link is for Piefed.world; run by the same team that run Lemmy.world
There are other piefed servers which may have different email requirements. But the most likely reason Piefed.world requires real emails is to prevent bots making fake accounts and also reduce the risk of bad actors making numerous accounts to avoid bans. As it's hard to get multiple real emails it makes it hard to make multiple anonymous accounts which is unfortunately a tactic of trolls.
You can of course create a dedicated "private" email account on an official service and use that to sign up if you're worried about sharing your primary email account. A lot of people do this online to have a legitimate email but essentially in it's own silo separate from other personal emails.
But Kemp, a lifelong Republican and Trump supporter, doesn’t hold that against Trump and suggested he might change course. “I really think he’s gonna do something,” she said.
It's this kind of thinking I find staggering. Trump has done something - it's his bill that caused the problem he's not going to change course. I don't understand why Trump voters want to judge Trump on his words rather than his actions. They're amongst those who are going to suffer to preserve tax cuts that won't benefit them.
Yeah I totally understand that, I've played around with immutable distros inside virtual machines and they're interesting. Also if you like tinkering, Linux is a great OS.
If you do go immutable have a play with KVM - Kernel Virtual Machines - they're easy to set up and give near native speeds for guest virtual Linux machines (or decent performance for other OS like Windows) It's a great way to play with Linux inside a sandbox while keeping your host clear; but also a very useful way to run custom software in a flexible Linux guest while on an immutable desktop. E.g. Create a Mint VM to run something that'd be a pain to set up on Silverblue.
Immutable desktop plus KVM guests might be the best of both worlds. Even if you don't end up on immutable distro, KVM is cool tech that has really advanced in the last few years. It's better and more powerful than VirtualBox imo, and I use it a lot even on my rolling release distro (I have a VM to run work Microsoft Office, plus a few Linux VMs for a torrent stack and just for tinkering).
"The Phantom Fellows" released on GOG and Steam
I like the way Cyberpunk did it in the end - you have your items to equip but also a wardrobe outfit that is visible. So you could equip the ugly ass powerful helmet but look like you had the cool shades on instead. Or appeaf naked if you really wanted.