Ah, yes, that’s what I meant with single player (or really single ship, since you can play with your friends) mode, couldn’t remember the name
Ah, yes, that’s what I meant with single player (or really single ship, since you can play with your friends) mode, couldn’t remember the name
Sea of Thieves is amazing and has some decent fishing. Might want to stay in the single player world if you just want cozy, although a sense of (PvP) danger can definitely liven things up too.
Haven’t heard of it before, but it does look interesting
Well the trade war isn’t going great for them…
A 10 Gbps network is MUCH slower than even the smallest oldest PCIe slot you have. So cramming the GPUs in any old slot that’ll fit is a much better option than distributing it over multiple PCs.
That already happened though. Tens of thousands of games on Steam can be played by hitting the install and then the play button. Only a few “competitive multiplayer” holdouts with rootkits and an irrational hatred of Linux don’t work.
Regarding the second point, militaries have a long history of using civilian products (see GPS in the gulf war for example) if they don’t have enough of the expensive stuff, which will lead to incentive to jam the civilian stuff as well. The article suggests that this system should be more resilient against simple jamming though.
That’s why they also offer a monthly subscription these days. Play it with all the DLC without owning any of it for 10 to 5 bucks a month (depending on how many months you subscribe for). Way cheaper if you don’t already own all of it and only want to play it for a while.
If it’s more permanent show them an Azeron Cyro at https://www.azeron.eu/ It’s a mouse with a thumbstick, you can play almost any PC game with one hand. Comes in both right and left handed versions.
Absolutely, that’s basically the same thing
I once switched from Debian i386 to amd64 in-place. That was MUCH harder than you would expect, I guess somewhere between medium and hard in your list. That server is still running that install btw, so in the end it all worked out.
I’ve started using this method in the past weeks and it mostly does what I want it to do: https://github.com/eriksjolund/podman-caddy-socket-activation/
Dunno when you played it but they’ve added tons of shit in the past years, so it might be worth it to give it another chance.
That is a very useful article, thanks for linking it!
The difference might be HTTP vs HTTPS. On a Pi the extra CPU load to properly encrypt the HTTPS stream is probably significant.
HTML 5 isn’t a programming language! (Yes, I’m a nerd)
This isn’t about replacing javascript, this compiles something that looks a bit like Python to C and then to WASM. Which browsers can run natively these days. But you can do that with any source language if there’s a compiler for it, type safe or not. You can compile Rust to WASM too for example. So nothing’s getting replaced, these are just additional tools for Web developers.
It is if you really want to git gud.
But what it also is is the nicest open sea sailing simulator, with awesome ambience and a fantastic world to just sail around in and do some relaxing things like fishing and just exploring all the islands. Especially in Safer Seas mode.