

The company I work for did the same, it’s not easy to completely replace an onpremise virtual farm but we’re working on it :)
The company I work for did the same, it’s not easy to completely replace an onpremise virtual farm but we’re working on it :)
It’s not ready yet (preview state) but NexusMods is developing an app for managing all their mods: https://github.com/Nexus-Mods/NexusMods.App, for Linux they’re releasing both an appimage and a standard setup.
Didn’t Ubuntu propose the same a while ago and had to step back because of all the backslash?
Is the change coming from Red Had this time? They’re enterprise only so it’s possible they don’t care about home users whom are the ones still in need of 32bit libraries, I think big enterprises would use Windows virtual machines for that.
I’m not personally impacted since I use Linux MX on my gaming desktop (Debian based) and Debian stood up during the Ubuntu debacle to state they have no intention whatsoever to remove 32bit libraries in the foreseeable future, but it’s certainly a blow for a lot of people, I hope Fedora change their mind about it.
It is mind-blowing indeed! Especially when they said it would take 11 of those maps to show the distance between a proton and en electron, it’s inconceivable how empty even the matter we’re surrounded by is.
That’s impressive!!
It really helps put distances into perspective, I also loved the little phrases along the way :D
Happy birthday!!!
Thank you for the fantastic job you all admins do for all of us <3
Ofc, assets should be copyrighted.
That’s interesting.
Assuming they’re hosting the project on GitHub, I did a search but the only repo I found that seems relevant is the backend SpacetimeDB mentioned in the article: https://github.com/clockworklabs/SpacetimeDB.
Do they really intend to open the source of the entire game? Or just the backend?
On one side, I’m one of those glad for people coming to Linux because Linux is truly fantastic and it can make your life easier on many things, I’m happy for them.
On the other side, I share your concerns, because everything that gets adopted by the masses is inevitably subject to enshittification, I would never want that to happen to Linux.
We should find a sweet middle-point tho I have no idea what that would be.
I surely hope they never will, no user program should ever be allowed to run at kernel level, that’s what malware does.
I personally avoid those kind of games, but those who won’t can dual-boot.
So, .zip is so bad that you block the entire domain on your home network yet you’re here commenting?
… just wow …
Of all the titles you could choose …
The article is interesting in that it talks about pushing towards open versions of kernel modules, instead of legacy ones, and of much broader scope that the literal 2 lines you chose as title.
Why not keeping the original?