Skip Navigation
Jump
Recommendation for Email-Provider
  • So, I don't know if people really realize the bridge is just a self hosted IMAP server... You could if you felt so inclined run it on one device and make it "public".

    1
  • Jump
    Recommendation for Email-Provider
  • While technically true, bridge is ultimately an IMAP server you run yourself ... and they do have good reasons for this design.

    3
  • Jump
    Anyone in Hamilton county Ohio recognize this truck?
  • Agree to some extent, labeling things terrorist organizations is kind of a slippery slope in the post-911 US though.

    2
  • Jump
    Anyone in Hamilton county Ohio recognize this truck?
  • I feel like I've seen a few of these in non-Nazi contexts ... But maybe I'm just being naive.

    6
  • Jump
    Why didn't the mainstream media warn people about Project 2025?
  • Yeah this is either projection because they didn't see the mainstream media doing it or an attempt to drive a wedge and create controversy where there shouldn't be any.

    7
  • Jump
    Live updates: Trump was the subject of an 'apparent assassination attempt' at his Florida golf club, FBI says
  • My concern is more so if he gets elected, he might try to justify "emergency powers" citing political violence as history has shown with other authoritarians.

    6
  • Jump
    Counter strike 2 issues
  • Yeah, I have issues with random really poor frame times. I'll be sitting at 144 FPS then get some frames that take 45ms to render each/severe stuttering.

    I "fixed" it using the proton version of the game though I've heard some people say that doesn't work with match making... Haven't tried that yet.

    I was thinking about trying the -vulkan launch option to see if that does anything if my proton install doesn't work.

    EDIT: They were right ... VAC doesn't work via Proton. I retried playing the native version and it seemed to run fine this time with or without -vulkan ... so I'm not really sure what's going on anymore.

    Maybe some things have been fixed either on the Linux/Mesa or on the Valve side.

    1
  • Jump
    Microsoft Windows kernel changes don't suddenly mean big things for Linux gaming
  • I have 0 interest in this guy's takes.

    He pushed an awful battle royale game that just took people's money (including mine) and never actually launched.

    He also once got into a Twitter (edit: it was actually mastodon) argument with me when he posted about an open source developer being "selfish" or something like that for telling him "if you don't like the readme, open a pull request with the changes you want made to it." Long story short, I told him it wasn't cool to make a post bullying an open source developer to donate more of their free time to something they didn't want to do, and that they have every right to tell him "go do it yourself." He blocked me.

    Yeah, he runs a Linux gaming website, yeah he talks about games that run on Linux which is cool, but ... make no mistake he doesn't have some deeper journalistic insight. If Microsoft does forbid kernel level anticheat, that will indeed be a game changer.

    11
  • Jump
    'We can't do computer graphics anymore without artificial intelligence. We compute one pixel, we infer the other 32': Jensen thinks AI is integral to next-gen graphics tech
  • I was going to defend "well ray tracing is definitely a time saver for game developers because they don't have to manually fake lighting anymore." Then I remembered ray tracing really isn't AI at all... So yeah, maybe for artists that don't need to use as detailed of textures because the AI models can "figure out" what it presumably should look like with more detail.

    I've been using FSR as a user on Hunt Showdown and I've been very impressed with that as a 2k -> 4k upscale... It really helps me get the most out of my monitors and it's approximately as convincing as the native 4k render (lower resolutions it's not nearly as convincing for ... but that's kind of how these things go). I see the AI upscalers as a good way to fill in "fine detail" in a convincing enough way and do a bit better than traditional anti aliasing.

    I really don't see this as being a developer time saver though, unless you just permit yourself to write less performant code ... and then you're just going to get complaints in the gaming space. Writing the "electron" of gaming just doesn't fly like it does with desktop apps.

    5
  • Jump
    We need to stop using /s unless there is a need.
  • Yes? I mean... No? I mean... Help are they being sarcastic?

    3
  • Jump
    Klan trying to recruit in Springfield
  • Someone more talented than me could probably recover the phone number via edge analysis.

    There's a good chance it's more for their post to not get taken down. That said this is from Twitter, so... IDK

    7
  • Jump
    Dwarf Fortress like? Cosmorists
  • That's definitely not "first person"

    2
  • Jump
    What's the easiest way to host a music colletion (FLAC)?
  • Plex is moving in the app direction... So Plex is probably moving away from what you want despite being one of the easiest options.

    It would probably be helpful to know what you're trying to accomplish beyond "what". Like, why do you want to host your music and play it via a web browser.

    2
  • Jump
    Anyone on the ground in Springfield?
  • Is fash slang for fascist?

    1
  • Jump
    Flappy Bird makes an unlikely comeback after its creator apparently let the trademark lapse and the vultures swept right in
  • I mean, I'm not sure that it doesn't. That was just a lottery ticket moment; those are always rare.

    3
  • Jump
    Why the wiki hosting website Fandom.com is full of controversies?
  • It's a shame, back when they were wikia and just hosted mediawikis with light ads, it was actually a really nice service.

    3
  • Jump
    Palworld faces the difficult choice of whether to become a live-service game or stay buy-to-play, PocketPair’s CEO says
  • I've never really been into fighting games; I did some Smash Brothers when I was younger but that's about it. I think fighting games are a fairly different beast entirely; they're a far more "couch friendly" genre.

    They also don't tend to have the absolutely massive operating costs where "it costs literally hundreds of thousands of dollars to make this map" and server costs of "it cost hundreds per month to run just a few servers (because of the complexity of processing all of the elements of an individual match" that Fortnite, PUBG, and Hunt Showdown have to deal with.

    Live Service:

    Never adopted a live service (but a big name):

    Live service is worse for the shooter genre on "eventual death" ... but so far none of the popular live service shooter games have really died. Meanwhile games that haven't and are still trying to compete with the "buy the new game for a premium price tag" (like Battlefield) are hurting. Calling of Duty is another big name that almost certainly is suffering from this problem but it can't be charted because they reorganized their game as "everything is under 'Call of Duty'".

    The fighting games on steam don't even come close to any of the shooter numbers.

    Other big genres like strategy do fine with the big release (in no small part because a big part of their game play is single player or "play with a well known group of friends"), e.g., https://steamcharts.com/app/289070 and https://steamcharts.com/app/413150 (both of those games also have seen almost "live service-like" levels of service via additional content throughout their lifespan).

    Live services get a lot of hate on Lemmy ... but there genuinely is something to them when they're done well. They're often better for shooters because the incremental changes allow developers to back off and fix things without totally fragmenting their community.

    Battlefield 2042 and Hunt Showdown: 1896 are great examples of this ... They both had rocky launches. Battlefield is a bigger franchise but because they made "extreme changes" vs incremental changes Battlefield 2042 is in much worse shape than Hunt Showdown: 1896 is and Crytek will in all likelihood be able to fix the things that people are upset about and get their numbers higher than they were. Dice/EA's best chance is "try again next year" at this point with their model (which will almost certainly cost players another $70 minimum to get into). Even then the game will remain fragmented with all the different Battlefield games out there and the expense of getting a new one.

    If you're frugal you could've played Hunt Showdown from 2018-present for its original price of $29 for the battlefield community for the same time frame to play on release you would've needed to spent $180 minimum.

    1
  • Jump
    Palworld faces the difficult choice of whether to become a live-service game or stay buy-to-play, PocketPair’s CEO says
  • We've had and will continue to have competitive games that are not live service.

    Interesting question... What competitive games from the last 10 years would you consider to be not live service games?

    1
  • Jump
    Palworld faces the difficult choice of whether to become a live-service game or stay buy-to-play, PocketPair’s CEO says
  • I don't think Fortnite can be meaningfully preserved anymore than say, Cedar Point can personally.

    Live services can also certainly transition out of a live service state; or if the source code is disclosed (per my previous statement) they can be transitioned by the community after they seize operation. Building a game like Fortnite or RuneScape just doesn't work without it being a centralized "destination." The experience is about the large number of players as much as it's about the game play.

    Live services are more of a destination than a product ... and for match made competitive shooters and things of that ilk ... I think that's fine.

    1
  • Jump
    Palworld faces the difficult choice of whether to become a live-service game or stay buy-to-play, PocketPair’s CEO says
  • You can emulate machines that can run Windows, and that's very effective at preservation.

    Hmm... I'm unaware of this, but I guess it's theoretically possible. Still it's a lot harder to emulate x86 + some graphics hardware than it is to emulate a Gameboy.

    Wine is already better than modern Windows at running software that relies on deprecated dependencies.

    Agreed, but it's not a silver bullet and A LOT of stuff is going to be shaken up now that x86 is starting to be challenged. For a long time PCs have been entirely operating on x86 (which is arguably part of why Java died ... the abstraction just wasn't necessary). That x86 dominance I think may have given a false sense of security for software longevity.

    It's not even that it's hard to port the games, but without the source code, it's just not going to happen.

    I kind of wish there were laws where source code had to be released after X years of inactivity, especially for games for the cultural preservation aspect. Like if you have abandoned a game and not released any new content (especially if you haven't released even any bug fixes/have totally abandoned the game), after 10 years the game code must be released.

    I don't necessarily think it needs to be a release of rights, assets, or anything like that ... but being unable to operate a game you've bought just because it was built for an older piece of hardware is 👎.

    But live service is just purposely killing games that didn't need to die.

    Bad live services are killing (in many cases bad) games that didn't need to die (and might have been better if less time was spent trying to force something to be a live service that didn't need to be one).

    There's a big difference between Suicide Squad Kill The Justice League and say... PUBG, Fortnite, Hunt Showdown, WOW, RuneScape, etc

    0
  • So, I'm trying to clone an SSD to an NVME drive and I'm bumping into this "dev-disk-by" error when I boot from the NVME (the SSD is unplugged).

    I can't find anyone talking about this in this context. It seems like what I've done here should be fine and should work, but there's clearly something I and the arch wiki are missing.

    32

    Hi folks, what sorts of things have you been doing on destiny lately? What are you finding fun?

    I thought the new campaign was good, but I'm increasingly finding it difficult to put time into Destiny post campaign. The gunplay is still great but ... the game has felt repetitive and little frustrations like ambiguity about how you get the new exotic class items just really are getting on my nerves. I spent probably 4 hours today redoing the same overthrow and feeling to get the wizards to spawn.

    I don't mean for this to be a negative post, but yeah; what do you enjoy about Destiny the most in 2024? Anyone here having similar feelings about the game?

    12
    www.nytimes.com TikTok’s Pro-China Tilt

    A bill that will force the app’s Chinese owners to sell will soon become law.

    The times dives into an intelligence report on how TikTok's political algorithm anomalies align with the CCP's Geostrategic Objectives https://networkcontagion.us/wp-content/uploads/A-Tik-Tok-ing-Timebomb_12.21.23.pdf

    This report highlights major differences in the prevalence of hashtags related to subjects like Hong Kong Protests, Tainanmen Square, Tibet, the South China Sea, Taiwan, Uyghurs, Pro-Ukraine, and Pro-Isreal when compared to other major social media platforms.

    Additionally the times cited a Wall Street Journal analysis (https://www.wsj.com/tech/tiktok-israel-gaza-hamas-war-a5dfa0ee) which "found evidence that TikTok was promoting extreme content, especially against Israel. (China has generally sided with Hamas.)"

    13
    www.nytimes.com TikTok’s Pro-China Tilt

    A bill that will force the app’s Chinese owners to sell will soon become law.

    The times dives into an intelligence report on how TikTok's political algorithm anomalies align with the CCP's Geostrategic Objectives https://networkcontagion.us/wp-content/uploads/A-Tik-Tok-ing-Timebomb_12.21.23.pdf

    This report highlights major differences in the prevalence of hashtags related to subjects like Hong Kong Protests, Tainanmen Square, Tibet, the South China Sea, Taiwan, Uyghurs, Pro-Ukraine, and Pro-Isreal when compared to other major social media platforms.

    Additionally the times cited a Wall Street Journal analysis (https://www.wsj.com/tech/tiktok-israel-gaza-hamas-war-a5dfa0ee) which "found evidence that TikTok was promoting extreme content, especially against Israel. (China has generally sided with Hamas.)"

    24

    Hi all,

    I'm visiting a relative that has a Google WiFi system with multiple access points. There's an access point literally right next to me that I can see in the KDE BSSID list with 100% connection strength.

    For some reason, it's instead picking a BSSID with only 60% strength. Does anyone have any thoughts on why it's choosing this access point instead of one of the others? Is this something the Google WiFi controls/suggests to the laptop, is something bugged, or is there a good reason Linux might be choosing this particular access point?

    EDIT: It turns out the access point placement was actually just really bad, and the access point in question was not even making it to the rest of the LAN... The speed difference between my phone and laptop seems to be just that, something to do with a difference between the framework and the Pixel's wireless cards (or drivers). Even with everything corrected, the Pixel is significantly out performing the framework.

    2
    secure.runescape.com Regarding Recent Varlamore Leaks

    We've made a short statement addressing a number of Varlamore-related videos aiming to dispel misinformation being spread by bad actors to turn a profit.

    (A catch up post ... the bot was broken by my instance upgrading to Lemmy 1.19, fixed now!)

    0
    secure.runescape.com Bots, Bans and Appeals: An Update

    An update from us on all things bots, bans and ban appeals.

    (A catch up post ... the bot was broken by my instance upgrading to Lemmy 1.19, fixed now!)

    0
    secure.runescape.com Defender of Varrock

    It�s time to see if the prophecy comes to pass, as we revisit a truly classic quest... Defender of Varrock!

    (A catch up post ... the bot was broken by my instance upgrading to Lemmy 1.19, fixed now!)

    0
    5

    Hi folks,

    I was wondering what people's thoughts are on the state of font rendering on Linux and if there are any important settings/packages I might not be aware of.

    I've never been particularly font sensitive. So despite being a long time user at this point... I'm still a Linux fonts noob. However, I know a lot of people are big into fonts.

    I recently installed Debian KDE as a desktop for my father. He likes it, but he wasn't crazy about the fonts. We turned the normal subpixel rendering on in KDE Font settings, but some pages definitely had blocky looking fonts (e.g. the Yahoo home page my dad still uses 🙃).

    Any tips? The documentation in this area seems to be lacking... and maybe it's just the resolution of the mintors and things (my dad had gotten used to his high resolution phone so jumping back to a 28" 1080p monitor is going to look blocky no matter what). Regardless, if there are any tips or things I might have missed, they'd be much appreciated!

    5