Yeah this actually feels pretty sane tbh
Yeah this actually feels pretty sane tbh
Yeah my friend and I had a dedicated server for a while. Super easy. They even have a Linux binary.
Bro no, this is what they did to Cain in RoboCop 2
Yeah Sega of Japan, particularly Sonic Team, actively refused to provide STI (American dev team) with source code necessary to build the game
Valve removed it because it used official N64 APIs that Nintendo holds as classified information. I think if it had totally been bottom-up crafted from scratch, it would have survived. But Valve does NOT wanna deal with a Nintendo lawyer.
32GB could be useful if the bandwidth is fast enough to be suitable VRAM, because then you can run games that want 16GB allocated to the CPU without having a GPU performance drop
Not sure if I’d call this “peril…” Call me a boomer, but if killing deliberately addicting feedback loops spells peril for the industry, then the industry has lost the plot.
Yeah they used to ship Linux executables on the same disk for Unreal didn’t they?
Might be a good way to run Photoshop if it’s more compatible with Adobe apps than Wine
Yes I too look nostalgically look back on my games having nothing but beep audio because I didn’t have one of three sound cards my chosen game decided to support
Uh, you don’t have to work at Google on order to do that. Most Chromebooks can be unlocked to work with Linux with a little bit of work. And you wouldn’t be at risk of going to jail for that. Worst that could happen is you void your warranty. But it’s not a “real crime” or anything like that.
It’s live now. It was live last week, but it’s still live now!
Dude the 3090 is a 24GB MONSTER of a GPU that cost $1500 USD when it came out
In the USA, yes.
Honestly, if it had good drivers and proper UEFI support, I would use a laptop with a Mediatek CPU. Most of my workflow is either web-based or already supports ARM.
All Intel CPUs have a Management Engine, basically a smaller CPU within the CPU designed for controlling the rest of the chip. It’s particularly good for things like IT management or devices because it operates with direct control over the other parts of the chip. This device’s firmware is based on Minix.
Ah yes, S. Oke Bomb. On of my favorite 19th century authors. Fun fact: his full name was Samuel Oklahoma Bombita!
Unknown is TempleOS