We all know there isn’t going to be a steam deck 3. Best we can offer is a steam deck 2 episode 2.
We all know there isn’t going to be a steam deck 3. Best we can offer is a steam deck 2 episode 2.
It shouldn’t, but modern phones are black magic to me, so I may be wrong.
Can you get it to boot into twrp via fastboot? If not then you could try flashing stock firmware to see if that resolves the issue. Another thing is you may run into issues installing lineage via twrp. The recommended way is by using their recovery image.
I used to have a similar setup but had it stream directly into MPV using the ytdl hook. Do you have it download the videos into a cache automatically and then load from file later and if so, how did you set that up?
Client: “Can you switch these two colours, you have 1 minute to fix it or you’re fired!”
Result:
Sounds like you want a proper backup solution. Take a look at borg backup, a tool that supports encrypted, deduplicated, compressed, incremental backups. You can even directly save to your cloud via protocols such as ssh, s3, etc.
On this note, I wonder if there is any correlation between review scores and operating system. If there are any devs on steam lurking here willing to contribute some data, it would be interesting to have a look at.
Stop giving them ideas!
Look more at the arcana packs. You can get some insane setups. One of my favourites is doing 5 of a kind, which is kicked off by taking the spectral card that turns your hand into all one rank. There’s also scaling builds, eg I used supernova to boost high card into the roof which was fun. The best part about boosting low value hands is that it is consistent, so you don’t need to worry about rng screwing you over.
I only really use them with the keyboard, desktop mode or any game that uses mouse emulation.
Can’t include any proprietary code, so using the google sdk would invalidate it I believe.
You already have a plethora of great suggestions for improvements to make, so I won’t leave any more, but rather offer some advice. It can be daunting to go all in and sacrifice the conveniences you currently enjoy. This is why I recommend you change your behaviour and software in a piecemeal fashion. Change only a few (or even one) things at a time and get used to it. Once you are comfortable with where you are at, then introduce more improvements. This approach will help prevent you from getting overloaded or burnt out, resulting in you going back and compromising your privacy. Good luck!
Played the hell out of the demo. Got the full game and so far it is brilliant!
It is just how I prefer to do my computing. I tend to live on the command line and pipe programs together to get complex behavior. If you don't like that, then my approach is not for you and that's fine. As for your analogy, I see it more as "instead of driving down the road in a car, I like to put my own car together using prefabs".
Option 4: levy existing tools such as gpg and git using something like pass. That way, you are keeping things simple but it requires more technical knowledge. Depending on your threat model, you may want to invest in a hardware security key such as a yubikey which works well with both gpg and ssh.
mCaptcha is an open source proof of work tool to tackle bots.
I migrated from lastpass to pass using pass-import. Worked wonders.
There are public instances you can use, or if you want it locally hosted, there is wsl2. (Alternatively, join the dark side and install linux!)
You can also use pgp via openkeychain which is very elegant