Intel’s Linux support has always been pretty good. IIRC they even do open source video drivers, it’s just that nobody cared about drivers for their IGPs and they didn’t have real video cards until recently.
Stadia really needed to be a monthly subscription model rather than asking people to buy games on Stadia.
Nobody wanted to buy in to a Google platform, but I might’ve signed up for a month and had a look.
Federation is glitchy right now, there’s fixes coming in Lemmy 0.18.1
uBlock Origin doesn’t have a 30 day limit:
www.youtube.com###title-text:has-text(Shorts):nth-ancestor(7)
Me too.
I originally intended to do a pcie passthrough setup with a second video card and use a Windows VM for gaming, but then DXVK hit and it just wasn’t necessary. The Windows games I cared about worked under Linux so I never got around to it.
Your comment made me put down my phone and laugh out loud until someone came and checked that I was alright.
They’re apparently planning on hoovering up everyone else’s data while keeping theirs to themselves.
It’s Meta, after all.
It makes me smile a little when I get ads for restaurants in the suburb in a completely different city where my ISP has its registered business address.
“This is a business decision, not like all those other times people protested companies.”
This. For a lot of people Reddit isn’t reddit.com, it’s Apollo or Relay or Sync or Reddit Is Fun.
After the apps stop working, they won’t be able to keep using the thing they’re used to. They can’t just go back, they’ll have to switch to something different.
Deterring very new accounts is still a useful thing to do.
A lot of posts on my country’s COVID sub were removed by the bot with an account too new message, and it was only set to about one week. It doesn’t really slow down new users but it cuts off a lot of spam bots.