

Yes, but doing that part requires root.


Yes, but doing that part requires root.


Oh hey, I just noticed App Manager can apply that net policy. Neat, that’s easier than how I used to do it.
As someone still using Nova, got a suggestion for me?


I wouldn’t mind using other services if any of them were competent. Steam gives me one-click Linux support for Windows titles, massive control reconfiguration capabilities, and a full suite of the normal expected features: achievements, cloud saves, forums, etc. Name me any competitor who even comes close. They dominate because they put in the work. Everyone else wants their slice of the pie but won’t bother to develop features worth using.


Fair! Mind you, the question was genuine curiosity. I don’t have projects of my own hosted at this time, but I may soon.


Why forgejo over self-hosted gitlab?


Remember Me. See for yourself:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYXfIgywXknHjMdirPIkDaEOM4cCyceDE
https://tidal.com/browse/album/41708231?u
If I remember correctly, they blew too much budget on the orchestra and it affected the game quality.


Whose brilliant idea was it to demo this with a wallpaper that looks like a shitty diagonal screen fold?


Eh, I’m not about to stop using Firefox, but the complaint is valid. They nuked a bunch of work from volunteers without notice in favor of shitty auto translate.
I suppose I should say freedom of relevant information. Things that fall into the net of privacy generally don’t benefit the public to know. I’m focused more on scientific research, software code, things like that. Things the public benefits from the sharing of.
Good question, and a difficult one to answer comprehensively. Generally I’d say if the information is sufficiently dangerous to know, then destroying that knowledge for -everyone- including the original possessor of that knowledge is a reasonable choice. The knowledge of how precisely to make a nuclear bomb is not necessarily going to benefit anyone. But given something where that isn’t an option, such as mapping a virus to attempt to fight it, I’d say the information still should be available.
Mind you, I recognize this is an idealistic viewpoint. But I also recognize I will not be the end arbiter of informational dissemination. I just seek to get us closer to the point where someone else can agonize over these issues.
Ultimate freedom of information. Death to proprietary knowledge.


You may want to investigate partnership with one of the Decky plugins that already handles some of this. I believe Steam Deck HQ is the main one now, though I haven’t used that myself.
Reminds me of The Moment from Dr. Who. Suppose it probably took a bit of inspiration from Hellraiser.
Interesting, for us bricks refers to the rechargable portable USB power devices they sell. I don’t even know how to describe them properly without calling them “bricks” or “power bricks”.


Most of the good ones have been mentioned, but I didn’t see Patchwork Heroes. Fantastic and unique action/puzzle game.
Yup, experiencing the same. Assumed it was another ddos or something, those are popular recently.


When you cross from Nevada into California, the roads turn to shit.
Wait, what is the age assurance thing? I thought just logging in was enough to make all age gates disappear, I didn’t realize there was anything special about my account (other than it being tied to my personal email instead of a Gmail address).