That’s crazy, most meeting software I’ve seen is cross platform and have web clients.
That’s crazy, most meeting software I’ve seen is cross platform and have web clients.
I thought he was dead already.
Who the fuck uses Windows 11?!
I don’t understand all 3 :)
The web interface is great and easy to use. I liked just dragging and dropping updated files to it, very simple.
I’m not an engineer and I am employed, I do a little scripting for fun. Software developers should learn how to use git but I’m not one :)
I hope they copy the web interface too. I stopped using GitHub for my dumb little projects when Microsoft bought them and I can’t be bothered to learn git. I will gladly host my future projects there if it’s good.
Allah works in mysterious ways.
My company banned CCleaner from our computers because they got hacked once and didn’t know about it. Microsoft is guilty of the same negligence with an added twist of corruption and greed! Think they’ll ban all Microsoft software too?
Why does the headline say “Crypto” but then snippet says “cryptocurrencies”? Do people not realize these are not the same thing? The inventor of Linux does believe in crypto, that’s why it’s in Linux!
California is a big place.
Look at the top left:
You don’t know what my KDE looks and acts like. I know exactly what your Gnome looks like because it’s not as customizable, they’re all extremely similar.
Installing battle.net in steam is really easy. Just add non-steam game in steam and choose the battle.net installer, then right click on it in steam and click properties, then compatibility, and choose Force the user of a specific Steam Play compatibility tool and choose Proton Experimental. Then just run it and install it like normal. Once it’s finished you just repeat the process for the actual installed battle.net program or whatever blizzard game you want. With this, you don’t have to mess with running custom commands. The blizzard launcher will be located somewhere like “/home/me/.local/share/Steam/steamapps/compatdata/2806461641/pfx/drive_c/Program Files (x86)/StarCraft II/StarCraft II.exe” where the big number after compatdata is something else. You can run the command
find ~/.local/share/Steam/steamapps/compatdata -iname '*battle*.exe
to help find it. Also you can tell Steam to always use proton experimental if you want, it’s been good to me. Good luck!
I found that changing KDE activities (like a virtual desktop) back and forth fixes it.
You can still make shortcuts to your steam games to launch them outside of steam. However I have noticed that the Blizzard launcher doesn’t seem to fully quit after quitting the system tray icon, I have to click stop game in steam. I guess I still prefer this to having unused wine/proton process running in the background.
Gnome is copying windows by putting buttons on the title bar lol
Gnome’s demented ideas make it into apps I run in KDE. I don’t need buttons, drop-down menus, and text input fields in my title bar lol. I’m lookin at you, LACT.
Haha no, it’s technically not an emulator. Emulation means having a whole fake CPU that runs your software. Wine doesn’t do that, instead it makes the windows exe run in Linux and provides an API so the calls your windows program makes run natively.
Tldr emulation is slow, wine makes your programs run natively.
I switched to Linux for gaming a year ago and I have been blown away by how good it is.
The guy that fought 2 fronts when they were completely unprepared for the coldest winter on record? He was dumb.