

I’m actually talking about the opposite way around (Using the mouse to control the camera). I already mentioned in my post that I have tried binding my mouse to the right analog stick but I got mixed results at best.
He/Him 🏳️🌈 🏴☠️
I’m actually talking about the opposite way around (Using the mouse to control the camera). I already mentioned in my post that I have tried binding my mouse to the right analog stick but I got mixed results at best.
Honestly depends on the hardware. I still had an Nvidia card for the first year I used Linux and 90% of my issues stemmed from that…
As for everything else I’ve had a much easier time with Linux than most people I know because I unintentionally bought peripherals that already worked great with Linux before I was even thinking about switching.
A few people I know have tried Linux but ran into issues with their mice or audio equipment that require proprietary drivers or dedicated software to fully function. Most of these are the big name “gamer” brands like Razer.
I had issues with Razers software all the way back on Windows 7 so I swore off buying anymore keyboards or mice that require 3rd party drivers so I never had an issue with them when switching over.
One of us! One of us!
I’ve worked in a few offices but never in an I.T. role.
Never been allowed to switch web browser, so a whole new operating system is out of the question. But I did ask once at a previous job, to get shot down.
Only place I’ve seen desktop Linux irl has been my own bedroom.
Belena Etcher has some issues with “telemetry” that’s turned on by default. Which is why I don’t recommend it.
I used Rufus quite a bit back on Windows and never had issues burning Windows or Linux ISOs to flash drives with it.
I grew up in the 2000s and got taught how to read an analog clock in like the first year of school.
I remember me teacher made a clock face on paper with the two arms pinned on. I brought up my parents had a clock with ‘lines instead of numbers’ and she taught everyone roman numerals on the spot.
What are teachers doing nowadays?
just took it as me calling them stupid (which was a weird bit of gaslighting).
Glad I’m not the only one who notices this. It’s not everyone I meet, but I know quite a few people who double down on their inability to do simple tasks or learn a basic skill… I mostly wonder where it started for these people.
Similar situation, had a buddy recently throw on a pair of $300 headphones because the cable broke.
Depends if it gets a dedicated enough fanbase for talented developers to put the work in.
Honestly even though I’m fully invested in desktop/laptop Linux. I kinda don’t get the buzz for a fully Linux phone, When de-googled Android exists and is already optimized for phone/touch use.
Only argument I have in favour of it is, it’s less dependant on Google.
But outside of that I don’t get the hype for running desktop apps (that normally aren’t designed for small touchscreens) on a phone.
hard to get everyone to buy into xbox
I was referring mainly to the fan made PC clients like Plutonium for the older Cod titles. and it even works on Linux with recent proton updates.
There’s a similar project for BC2 to BF4 but I haven’t looked into it much and dunno if it’s playable on Linux.
BF4 is still the fps I have the most hours logged in (around 1200 last I checked)
I was on both the Cod and Battlefield trains until BF5 and Advanced Warfare…seems they just kept trying to fix what wasn’t broken while leaving long standing issues be.
Lucky most of them games got fan made servers/clients so even when the official servers die people will still be able to play them.
Even not as far back at BF4 we have 3rd party host-able servers.
They’re still quite active today with few cheaters because people developed server side anti-cheat plugins to monitor suspicious stats and keep a blacklist of known cheaters and their alt accounts.
I still love Battlebit, it’s the closet thing to a real Battlefield game we’ve have in a long time.
But sadly devs took the money and ran…
Game hasn’t been updated in 19 months.
Some laptops don’t really let you boot from external install media so easily nowadays.
I helped a buddy get Linux Mint on their “old” laptop to try it out. But it turned out you needed some manufacturer provided code to unlock booting from anything but the main harddrive within the bios.
We contacted support but never heard back. We did find a work around when they decided to swap the existing HDD for an SSD, they used a USB to sata cable to install Mint on the SSD from their desktop then installed the SSD into their laptop in place of the original drive so it booted straight into that.
Now the real question is.
Can I emulate WiiU games on my Desktop PC while using the Steamdeck as the pad/2nd screen?
Even the original Skate games can be played through RPCS3 if you got a beefy PC.
I dunno if it has a single player mode but everything we’ve seen of the game so far shows it heavily multiplayer focused.
Also if the names the part confusing you. This isn’t a port of the original Skate game, it’s a reboot.
It’s a micro-transactions store with a game built around it. Knowing EA they’ll probably throw their rootkit anti-cheat in to assure investors that “hackers” won’t get anything for free.
MC3 works great in PCSX2 on Deck.
There’s also Midnight Club L.A. Remix for the PSP which I recently 100%'d through PPSSPP. It’s closer gameplay wise to MC3 than the full console version of Los Angeles.
Sadly Midnight Club Los Angeles still kinda sucks to emulate at the moment. but someone is working on a re-compilation of the game for PC. But seems like that going to take a while even if things go well…
Steam input only lets you rebind controllers, not mouse and keyboard.
Also the software on Windows I was mentioning doesn’t just emulate the right stick but actually hooks into the game directly to get as close to native mouse support as possible.