Moth mode should be a required feature in every web browser
Moth mode should be a required feature in every web browser
From what I heard one component was that it was difficult to line up the release dates between updating the Ubuntu base and KDE because Ubuntu uses GNOME and they line up their release dates with that
As a Unix weirdo I grok you
If you don’t want to install Linux, You should install plan9
MLVWM is a classic mac window manager for X11
https://github.com/morgant/mlvwm
Also you will need
https://github.com/morgant/mlvwmrc
Also bonus: Mac OS 8 startup for Plymouth
It kinda depends on what games you are using.
If they are online only with anti cheat dual booting is the only viable solution because most anti cheat’s that don’t work with Linux/proton will flag you as cheating if you try to use a vm.
If its some older game its prolly better to use a vm for that OS, lien a lot of old games for windows XP or windows 95 are like that. For really old ones you can just use dosbox which is very tried and true.
If it’s just some random game that doesn’t work I either A: figure it will get working in some way eventually or B: give up on ever playing it again.
I think I’m at the point where if a new game comes out and it didn’t work on Linux I just wouldn’t buy it. But I might be an outlier since most of the games I like usually get a Linux port or will work with proton anyways
Classic Mac OS 7.5.3 -> 8.5 -> 9.2 -> Windows 2000 -> XP -> Vista -> 7 -> 8.1 -> 10 -> Pop!_OS (for a few years but eventually wanted a KDE based distro) -> Garuda Linux (for a few years but wanted to try out nobara for gaming) -> Nobara (for now, great for gaming, frustrating for programming because of package differences) and other unknown reasons)
It seems like Fortran except it’s python syntax and it’s weakly typed so you will get into type checking hell if you use any library which tries to be fancy and create their own types.
Outside of the syntax though: The speedups look really cool!
I’m curious to see what potential speedups would look like in a large project.
Additionally, I’m curious to see what the power requirements are for programs written in it since it seems like it will highly parallelize all statements in the language.
I also wonder how soon it will be for someone to implement a deadfish / bf / lisp interpreter in it
This should be cannon mirror universe pakleds
Ah cool! Did not know this existed!
‘ssh -X’ will do x11 forwarding if the config on the remote system is set up properly
Wayland is good, it is nice to be able to forward X apps over ssh though
The Linux mint live installer comes with the bcmwl-kernel-source package which will allow you to install it. It worked on my 2013 MacBook Pro which uses a Broadcom chip
A great series for those of you that didn’t get that reference: https://youtu.be/uRGljemfwUE?si=var1USdiNFUMiYjW
Sounds like you are trying to develop a MOO, i think you might find this interesting
Also if you wanted to develop one yourself I did a project a long time ago based on [https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=2068896](this guide for developing a language in Racket lisp to generate text adventure games) which might fit the requirements
I have one and it mostly works fine out of the box. It’s been a while since I set it up but I think I used the Linux CUPS driver. I had one time where it printed raw postscript but I haven’t had that happen since.
I use hugo, it’s a fast lightweight static site generator written in go
I think that the blagh app for werc might also work, it’s written in rc shell
Many years ago now I was told that we needed a way to turn a series of lights on and off for a custom bit of hardware. The hardware ran a Unix-like system so I decided that a daemon would be a good fit for the use case. I do not know what has become of my daemon of light but I do know whomever uses it must call the “summon” function to daemonize the process