There are a couple of emulation communities outside of Beehaw:
There are a couple of emulation communities outside of Beehaw:
How would this control people selling their used hardware? I don’t see anything about Sony trying to disable resold consoles.
you’ll get “a product that works like new with genuine PlayStation replacement parts (as needed) that has been thoroughly cleaned, inspected and tested”. You will receive all the cables and paperwork you need for a PS5, and it comes with a 12-month manufacturer’s warranty
That’s worth a premium to some people.
It is possible. Before Cemu (Wii emulator) had a native Linux version, people ran the Windows version in Wine.
By the way, it’s okay to say emulator. Hardware emulation is not the only kind of emulation.
Oops.
Since you’re using sudo, I suggest setting different passwords on production, remote, and personal systems. That way, you’ll get a password error before a tired/distracted command executes in the wrong terminal.
Suggestion: Rather than using this text forum as a youtube click farm, include in your post an overview of your key points and a summary, as text. This would inform readers why they might (or might not) want to spend their time sitting through your video.
the fact that many electric cars rely on cloud services
Terrible idea, predictable results.
To be clear, there are still 42 hours before the giveaway ends, so nobody has missed it yet. :)
Is there a text version? Or if someone watched the video, are these drives sold by Amazon or by third party sellers?
I think you meant posterity. :)
Even League of Legends?
I set the filter in that link to 300mm, which is a bit less than 12". If you actually have 310mm to work with, it would show more options including some from PowerColor, who made the card I’m using and am happy with.
I suggest checking each model’s power jack positions as well. You don’t want to buy a card that barely fits only to find that there’s no room left for the power cables.
EDMC is written in python, and definitely works on linux. (At least, version 5.8 did.)
I don’t know about VoiceAttack, but you might consider looking for alternatives, like maybe this one: https://github.com/stele95/LinVAM/
o7
Maybe shadPS4 will (eventually) manage it?
https://github.com/shadps4-emu/shadps4-game-compatibility/issues/2
I don’t know the whole story behind Cybenetics, but I think it started just a few years ago as one guy who was active in the hardware enthusiast community and dissatisfied with the info generally available about power supplies. He has been doing outstanding work, not only in measuring performance and efficiency in multiple dimensions, but also in measuring the noise produced by these things at various workloads, and publishing the results for free. The reports were instrumental in my last hardware purchase, and I’m very happy with the model I chose.
It’s great to see his work recognized by a big vendor, and to see a big vendor moving to a superior certification system. Thanks for posting this.
While that might be technically true, the kernel module is only a tiny fraction of the driver stack.
Also, I’m not interested in rewarding a company that spent decades making life difficult for open source users and developers, when there are competitors who have done far better (and have more experience) in this space.
AMD: yes.
Sapphire: Meh. They earned a good reputation maybe a decade or two ago, but other brands have been making equally good or even better cards more recently. (Also, my last Sapphire card’s fans, including their replacements, were continually developing weird noises and eventually failing.)
I’m happier with PowerColor these days. Currently using a Hellhound RX 7800 XT with great results.
Great, it’s reliable and enforces design patterns!
Upvoted because this is Programmer Humor. Thanks for the laugh, stranger!
The comments on this article might lead to good info.
https://www.phoronix.com/news/Steam-FreeBSD-2021
I expect a lot is possible if Wine and good Vulkan drivers are available.
This guy shows how to get Steam up and running:
Games requiring kernel-level anti-cheat are such a small minority of games that I struggle to think how this could mean big anything (good or bad) to Linux gaming in general.