Functions great. I just wish the UI was a bit nicer in terms of look and how things are arranged (there’s some redundancy and strange placements). Though I did read on the Discord that some of the devs wanted to rewrite the UI code in Qt’s QML, so maybe that would coincide with some UI changes.
Does anyone know what they mean by “legacy runtime environment”? Do they mean running of the host system libraries rather than Valve’s runtimes?
I wonder how Apple’s wine fork handles this since presumably games are still expecting a 4K page on MacOS.
I doubt this will have much of an effect. Compositors already implement protocols that aren’t in upstream yet.
All this really is is putting some of those protocols in a GitHub repo and giving them a nice name. Gamescope will naturally implement them because frog works on gamescope. KDE might implement a few. Gnome and wlroots probably won’t implement them because (1) Gnome prefers a more lean set of protocols and likely won’t adopt a protocol until it’s “finished” and (2) Simon Ser, the wlroots main maintainer, is very involved with upstream protocols and would rather see development happen there.
I’m not a fan of Inter either. Since Gnome is planning on moving to it, I’ve tried it a bit. It’s weirdly wide, which I don’t like.
This GitHub comment has the command to give Steam the permission it needs for VR.
https://github.com/flathub/com.valvesoftware.Steam/issues/898#issue-1222145279
Not out of the box, but you can make it work.
I use the Steam flatpak. The nice thing about that is that 32bit libraries aren’t installed on the host system.
Is there an RSS feed for this? Couldn’t find one.
Edit: Doesn’t seem like there is one just for the apps, but it’s part of the KDE Blogs RSS feed: https://blogs.kde.org/index.xml
I like the before more. I would also like the color of the active tab to be the same as the area’s backgroud it’s connected to, like in Linux Mint’s default theme.
It’s weird how the templates folder is so rarely used. Even on Gnome, where basic things like creating a .txt is not there (only new folder), “new user friendly” distros like Ubuntu don’t add them as templates.
They did sponsor/donate to someone who got the Epic Games Launcher working through wine. Don’t remember the exact details and can’t find a link though.
Even if Valve pushed their own Steam machine back then, it would have failed miserably. It simply had terrible game support because Proton didn’t exist (or integration with wine). Only the few native linux games out there would work.
But now Valve has Proton. I doubt the Steam Deck would have taken off if it wasn’t for that.
Their website is down
Integrals. I can have an area function, integrate it, and then have a volume.
And if you look at it from the Rieman sum angle, you are pretty much adding up an infinite amount of tiny volumes (the area * width of slice) to get the full volume.
What OS are you running? On Windows, there’s an updater. Probably same for MacOS.
If you install the tar.gz on Linux, there’s an updater. If you have the flatpak, you update through flatpak. Distro packages get updated by the distro.