Go fuck yourself. Learn to support your community and get some therapy.
Implying the people of Toronto have anything to do with this. Clearly was reported
Which mouse? HID is all but guaranteed to work on linux
Use available tools, what concepts are you stuck on?
https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/osi-model-networking-layers-explained-in-plain-english/
who is advertising Linux
Enterprise, Lenovo, Canonical group, Dell, IBM/Red Hat
The usual suspects
First image looks like a possum lol
The fractal Terra is small but not stackable; easy access to everything but sata drives. In the past I used a Sugo 13 but the psu takes up most of the space.
Lian li and Asus have some good micro atx options like the tu150 or the ap201. Overall small compact machines that stack are best suited to 1U/2U rackmounts in my experience
Nextdns.io for hosted DNS blocks ads and malware.
Also this list
A1 is recommended for compatibility and performance.
https://www.kingston.com/en/blog/personal-storage/memory-card-speed-classes
They’re a new company so we’ll still have to see if they’re as reliable as some older machines. Providing parts and usb c adapters helps with longevity I guess
Forbes isn’t great but their overall philosophy means it should last at least 10 years if you take care of it. I have an acer c720 with Debian that still kinda works
Remote play together and steams controller management are two separate things.
RPT creates a tunnel to make everyone appear in the same session.
For controllers, especially in Linux check that you have the correct settings enabled eg. Enable PlayStation/nintendo support vs the default Xbox emulation.
I’ve personally never had any issues with RPT and controller settings after checking the controller is setup properly in Steam.
In my experience I’m actually impressed with the ‘full simulation’ performance so far.
Absolutely it was released far too early, I’m looking forward to feature parity with CS1 and getting it to a proper state.
got it, because the project supports flatpak, you feel like you need to explain it. yes, if the op configures flatpak to use a repo that has aarch software then flatpak works as expected. glad that could be cleared up.
Without any further configuration, might as well as add that to your edited paraphrased quote.
The op said it wasn’t working, I’m only agreeing with him that it doesn’t work as expected.
Your lengthy explanation of flatpak doesn’t seem to be postmarketos related.
My statement is true , that flatpak is arch agnostic but primarily supports x86.
I never said it didn’t or wouldn’t work; if you’re not seeing your apps it’s not because they don’t exist, they aren’t built for aarch64 and target x86
It is not a product as so much a project. I would recommend reading up on the goals and mission of postmarketos and instead support rather than point out shortcomings.
If you are a developer I’m sure the team would be happy to give write access but considering your novice experience your opinion is likely less important than actually improving things.
Testing out the x86 builds using qemu is typically the first step to understanding and if you want to make changes, opening a PR or demonstrating your value to the project would make it more worthwhile for them.
I’m am a follower of this project myself and have nothing to do with postmarketos or the wiki.
Flatpak while agnostic is currently only working as expected on x86_64
https://github.com/flatpak/flatpak/issues/5210
Postmarket uses Alpine for its base; if the package exists in the Alpine base repo you’re using then no issues.
https://liliputing.com/how-to-install-apps-in-postmarketos-with-phosh-shell/