I assume it was just named after r/politics - like most of the other communities here during the migration.
If the only piece of advice on how to live you get from a religion is “Stay alive as long as you can!” That’s still better than a lot of the rest of them.
There’s also a restaurant chain which is also named Dick’s
The “Eat some Dick’s” jokes write themselves.
Yeah, This case especially since it includes XWayland
So, what was the solution?
If you want one that isn’t actually from that time, just feels like it, I’d say https://tildes.net/
I also read the announcement (and FAQ, and other pages) but was still hoping someone would comment on what it is exactly.
(I did guess along the right lines at least, but wasn’t really sure)
I don’t see evidence in the article that it even is ‘their software’ being discussed here - just a framework they are suggesting for compositors to have new functionality (regardless of GPU brands).
It even says “They aren’t going into this alone but at this year’s DisplayNext Hackfest it was also backed up by AMD for going a similar route.”
I guess I’ll be the one to ask. Since we are on Lemmy…
Linux support?
Pretty sure it is, and the other line is a chin. See green talking in the first panel.
Huh.
I thought it started with the Pikachu thing. TIL.
Every dedicated rice cooker I’ve seen has a permanently open vent. They aren’t pressurized.
They won’t be able to afford it.
If you don’t mind gacha games, I’ve been enjoying Honkai: Star Rail. The battles are turn based, some of the puzzles and events are a bit reaction time dependent, but not difficult generally.
Any time I see an article about someone doing things with Redstone circuits, I think about that comic.
This was my first exposure to Linux - one of the PCs in high school had it installed. (I had read about Linux before then, but not had a chance to try it)
It had a little foam Tux in the box, and I got to keep it:
Implosive compression.
My immediate reaction before opening the link: “No.”
Yet I somehow got 96.6% twice.
Visually, I certainly wouldn’t call them 3.4% away from perfect. I’m guessing there’s some allowance for imperfection even at 100%.