Thanks for understanding.
Thanks for understanding.
They don’t seem to have a lecturing tone in their comment. The only part which you might have a point about is where they say “objectively”, but throughout the whole comment they’re really just expressing their opinion and showing their experience with smart TVs, which they’re entitled to have and might be different from yours.
No aggressiveness intended. Just trying to keep the niceness around.
Seconding this. It has every feature you know Windows needs but it still doesn’t have (likely because of the need for testing or being aimed at power users).
Yeah, I was just pointing it out for transparency, as this is the OSS community. Still a noteworthy app, though.
Definitely nice to have, thanks. I have gotten used to Lemmy’s UI, which, honestly, isn’t that bad, especially when compared to the other site’s new UI. But I’m gonna give this one a try either way, as I might find myself reminiscent of it.
Dude, the 1080 came out in 2016, that was just… oh.
Unfortunately, it’s not open source though.
SteamOS 3 hasn’t been released as an ISO (yet?), but there’s the unofficial HoloISO as a replacement.
Oh alright, so I assume “fatigue” being at 0 means you’re tired and full means you aren’t?
Wouldn’t “Restore Fatigue” mean it makes you more tired?
What if B just moves A’s pieces after shooting them?
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That’s not all the context, though. GamersNexus made a video detailing it further. and a follow-up.
I couldn’t find any indication of it being open source anywhere
Linus tech tips, despite having some criticisms, had a rather positive opinion of Linux as far as I can remember
XMPP is a protocol for decentralised chats, allowing people registered on different servers to chat with people on other servers, kind of similar to how email works (and Lemmy of course).
Google Talk was a service by Google which started with XMPP support, letting users from other XMPP servers chat with Google Talk users. Google Talk was always slightly different from the XMPP standard, due to having proprietary code in its backend, leading to chats between Talk users working flawlessly but not between XMPP and Talk users. Slowly, Google Talk became more popular than the other servers.
Eventually, XMPP server-to-server support was removed as part of their transition to Hangouts, meaning once Talk users switched to it, XMPP users would no longer be able to chat with them and would have to switch to Hangouts. While XMPP still exists today, it’s definitely a niche nowadays, and this is part of the reason.
Edit: proper paragraphs
That’s how people thought it would have gone with XMPP and Google Talk, but that’s not how it went at all
The Cromite GitHub page also says it supports arm32-v7a right at the beginning (for some reason later in the README it lists the platforms again without it, someone probably forgot to change it), I believe it’s the file in the releases called arm_ChromePublic.apk (not arm64), so try that
(Note: it does say it’s Android 7 or higher though, so it still might not work unless you try some custom ROMs)