My guess: The kids who used Discord for gaming grew up, and just went with the familiar thing when starting new communities and projects.
Also, Discord did heavy marketing early on, until it carved out a network effect. So here we are.
My guess: The kids who used Discord for gaming grew up, and just went with the familiar thing when starting new communities and projects.
Also, Discord did heavy marketing early on, until it carved out a network effect. So here we are.
On the bright side:
Aggressive garbage collection and automatic thread locking are optional settings in most web forum software I’ve seen.
Lemmy shares some of the important parts of Usenet, and could develop into something that comes close.
A web forum is far better in most cases. If you can’t manage to run your own, there are plenty of lemmy servers that will do it for you. Even an email list (with searchable archives) would be better than Discord.
If you have collaborative documents that outgrow the forum format, use a wiki.
If real-time chat is needed, irc or matrix.
A project hosting its community on Discord is a project that won’t get my contributions.
he’s gone off the rails in the last 6-12 months - complaining about needing more linux devs
It’s also ironic in light of his history of loudly bashing linux and linux game development.
I can’t think of anything good to say about Tim Sweeney.
I might give Backpack Battles a try. It doesn’t look like my usual style, but I heard there’s some good strategy under the surface, and I like that it’s made with Godot.
This is true in C, but not in D.
After decades of license strangleholds by the likes of MPEG LA and Microsoft, it’s refreshing to see open codecs adopted in mainstream hardware and APIs. Hooray for progress!
So with normal use it should be fine for a few decades.
Considering that “normal use” can be so very different among different people/applications/climates, I don’t put a lot of stock in assessments like that, but it is at least one prediction to compare against when we see what happens in practice. Time will tell.
I’m curious how long the current gen OLED consoles will be in use before they develop screen burn-in.
Or by people formerly paying for their internet service with money that should have been going toward food or heat.
Losing the $30 monthly discount could force families to choose between broadband and other necessities,
Exactly.
It’s also important to note that some ISPs created a low-cost service plan specifically for ACP. (It’s reasonable to assume this was possible in part because ACP handled income verification and eliminated the costs of individual billing and credit card payments.) That plan will likely disappear if ACP goes away, leaving poor people stuck paying a bill much higher than the program ever paid.
Linux has quite a few schedulers. The performance of this new one is almost certainly a result of different algorithms used, not an effect of refactoring the existing ones, nor the language it’s written in.
I don’t think I’ll dig in to the code just now, but if it turns out to have much practical value, perhaps we’ll eventually see an article about the design.
Seems like a weird headline. AFAIK, the language it’s written in has nothing to do with the performance.
dedent() can help with that.
[…continuing…]
composable
, default_overload
, deprecated
, and protected
attributes
are supported in the IDL compiler.libwine.so
library is removed. It was no longer used, and deprecated
since Wine 6.0. Winelib ELF applications that were built with Wine 5.0 or
older will need a rebuild to run on Wine 9.0..seh
directives for exception
handling is required on all platforms except i386.The Wine team is proud to announce that the stable release Wine 9.0 is now available.
This release represents a year of development effort and over 7,000 individual changes. It contains a large number of improvements that are listed below. The main highlights are the new WoW64 architecture and the experimental Wayland driver.
The source is available at
Binary packages for various distributions will be available from
You will find documentation on
Wine is available thanks to the work of many people. See the file AUTHORS for the complete list.
--enable-archs=i386,x86_64
option to configure. This is expected to work
for most applications, but there are still some limitations, in particular:
ARB_buffer_storage
extension
support.There is an experimental Wayland graphics driver. It’s still a work in progress, but already implements many features, such as basic window management, multiple monitors, high-DPI scaling, relative motion events, and Vulkan support.
The Wayland driver is not yet enabled by default. It can be enabled through
the HKCU\Software\Wine\Drivers
registry key by running:
wine reg.exe add HKCU\\Software\\Wine\\Drivers /v Graphics /d x11,wayland
and then making sure that the DISPLAY
environment variable is unset.
HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Wow64\x86
registry key. The FEX emulator
implements this interface when built as PE.D3DXFillTextureTX
and D3DXFillCubeTextureTX
are implemented.ARB_fragment_program_shadow
.D3DXLoadMeshHierarchyFromX
and related functions support user data loading
via ID3DXLoadUserData
.bew-ID
, blo-BJ
, csw-CA
,
ie-EE
, mic-CA
, prg-PL
, skr-PK
, tyv-RU
, vmw-MZ
, xnr-IN
, and
za-CN
.zh-Hans
, are also supported on macOS.systeminfo
application prints various data from the Windows Management
Instrumentation database.klist
application lists Kerberos tickets.taskkill
application supports terminating child processes.start
application supports a /machine
option to select the
architecture to use when running hybrid x86/ARM executables.tasklist
application is implemented.findstr
application provides basic functionality.[…continued in a reply, due to Lemmy’s character limit…]
I don’t think regular users have access to that info on lemmy. (Maybe you’re thinking of a kbin feature?)
mileage may vary if you’re looking at cutting edge games, as driver updates can significantly boost performance in that case.
If you’re playing games in Steam, Flatpak, or any other tool that provides its own runtime, the graphics driver updates that tend to affect performance (e.g. Mesa) don’t come from your base distro.
(Unless maybe you have an Nvidia GPU and a distro that packages its proprietary drivers? I’m not sure in that case, since I quit Nvidia years ago.)
Any reason why I shouldn’t just go with Debian + KDE and install Steam?
No reason to avoid Debian unless you have hardware so very new that it requires the very latest kernel to operate.
If you go with Debian Stable, you can enable Backports for a fairly recent kernel, currently 6.5.10. You could go with Testing or even Unstable if you’re addicted to upgrading as often as possible, but chances are you won’t need to.
I’m gaming on Debian Stable with Steam in a flatpak. It works great, and is blissfully low maintenance.
At some point, you’ll probably run into people claiming that Debian is bad for gaming performance because of “outdated” packages. In most cases, those people don’t know what they’re talking about. I suggest ignoring them unless they identify a specific performance issue that actually affects you.
Joke’s on them. Google locked me out of my account when I refused to give them my phone number.
That’s most likely due to low rankings. Lemmy doesn’t prevent it.