Aurora is a great choice given those parameters. I also installed it on my wife’s laptop and she hasn’t had any problems. I even edit video in Resolve on my Aurora thinkpad so I know the nvidia drivers are fine.
Aurora is a great choice given those parameters. I also installed it on my wife’s laptop and she hasn’t had any problems. I even edit video in Resolve on my Aurora thinkpad so I know the nvidia drivers are fine.
I use Aurora on my thinkpad, bazzite on my gaming desktop, and fedora on my desktop at work. Huge fan of what Universal Blue is doing.
Someone should invent some kind of database of syntax, like a… code
Check out Bazzite!
I was having a much better Christmas before I saw this AI slop on my feed.
I use it all the time! Works great.
Fresh meat!
Are Ubiquiti devices still the best value for homelabs and small businesses these days?
Not from scratch - just like with other AI models they are created by mixing together a bunch of existing voices.
The only good printer is a dead printer.
You’re not entirely wrong but the Pal system itself has a good amount of depth - Pals have traits and skills, and are weaker or stronger against different other types of Pals, so you can be very clever about what skills you teach them and what fights/environments you take them into. The game can get very easy if you exploit this system properly but is quite challenging if you ignore Pal stats and just grind levels and gear.
Yes, he is a major character in the single player campaign along with Gary Oldman, Mark Strong, Gillian Anderson, and others who provided voice acting and facial performance capture.
The DLSS3 mod runs via ReShade. I don’t mind people charging for their work, but this guy is selling access to an Nvidia dll via an open source tool, which I am not a fan of. Not a lot of original work, just repackaging.
I trust you have your own threat model and know what’s best for you, but in my opinion privacy necessitates security.
Odd choice to use GrapheneOS if you don’t care about security. More power to you, though.
Reaper, the daw mentioned in the post, also runs fine on Linux.