@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

bigmclargehuge

@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world

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bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

In an age where everyone rags on live service games that will inevitably lose support, a cheap, fun, well made, feature complete game (and was that way on release) that gets infrequent updates is “abandoned” and “insultingly barebones”. Classic 2024 gamer moment right there

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Sorry, should say I mean feature complete in a relative sense. Ie, some EA games are essentially tech demos, and you’re funding a theoretical game when you buy. If those games stopped getting updates, you’re left with a mostly empty unreal engine project, not a full video game.

Valheim was a full video game on day one. A buddy and I played many hours when it first came out and thoroughly enjoyed it. If no updates came out, I might have felt like there was some unmet potential, but I certainly wouldn’t have been insulted. Bottom line, take away the roadmap, I still see a great game with enough going for it to stand on its own.

What're some of the dumbest things you've done to yourself in Linux?

I’m working on a some materials for a class wherein I’ll be teaching some young, wide-eyed Windows nerds about Linux and we’re including a section we’re calling “foot guns”. Basically it’s ways you might shoot yourself in the foot while meddling with your newfound Linux powers....

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

My biggest thing when switching to Linux was understanding why I didn’t have permission to alter half of my file structure. I was trying to take ownership of my /usr directory as a user and had to have multiple people explain why that was a bad idea (and why simply making any changes as a super user via terminal was more than adequate for the results I wanted).

My mindset was a result of so many user files being spread across dozens of branches of the Windows file structure. Some very close to the root of the drive, some a few directories deeper. I didn’t really understand the benefit of having all my stuff in /home (and am now a full convert. Just thinking about navigating a Windows drive makes my skin crawl now).

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

When l go to upgrade my system and my skin crawls.

Seriously though, generally I justwantt only what I actually use. I recently reinstalled because I had a bunch if useless junk that was eating space for zero gain.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

“The new generation”

So there are no 40 year olds who blindly pre order the 15th CoD game because that’s all they play? This is a general issue in the gaming community as a whole.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

I have to say i own a decent amount of Corsair hardware (kb+m, RAM, SSD and PSU), and none has ever given me an issue. Most of it I got a few years back so maybe that was before they declined?

Compared to Razer, where I’ve owned 3 mice and all of them failed one way or another. Decent keyboards though.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Yes I did a decent amount of research on their PSUs, I managed to get one with a pretty solid reputation.

And I’m on Linux and use a community made software suite called CKB-Next, so I haven’t had to deal with iCue in a couple years thankfully

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Have it on GOG and play via heroic. I get 80+ FPS at high settings @1440p (balanced FSR), AMD R7 5800x, RX 7600XT. This is on Arch.

I had to use winetricks to install some DLLs to the prefix in order for the game to work properly with mods, but beyond that I’ve had no issues.

Edit, I just reinstalled the game yesterday. Installed via heroic, set my wine version to Proton experimental. Set my launch executable to Cyberpunk2077.exe, rather than the launcher (launcher was just a black box for me). Opened winecfg from heroics settings for the game, went to the Libraries tab, and added version to my list of installed libraries. That can be typed in manually, or picked from the drop down. After that, the game works as expected, and most mods I tried work (unfortunately, a resource called Codeware that a lot of mods rely on seems to crash my game. However, I only have a handful of mods, and none of the ones I use need it).

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Some Android phones can already be dual booted with (in theory) any other UEFI compatible OS. There’s a whole guide on the PostmarketOS about setting up a dual boot environment.

I briefly tested PostmarketOS on a OnePlus 6T. The core functions seemed fine but overall it lacked functionality, so my plan was to dual boot with LineageOS (a degoogled android project) for the bits that really just want a true android environment to function properly, and PmOS for everything else I could manage. In the end I just wasn’t up for the process of setting up a dual boot, and went with just LineageOS. Been really happy with it so far, and will probably revisit dual booting when PmOS is more feature complete.

Edit, I suppose this doesn’t touch on the idea of running two separate OS’s on separate chips, and it does require a reboot to get the functionality of one OS or another, but besides that hiccup you’d get mostly the same functionality out of less complex hardware.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

I have a rule about acronyms: if the spelling makes sense to be said as a word, I follow the English grammatical rules. A word that’s spelled s-u-s-e would be pronounced “soos”, so that’s what I say.

This is why I don’t pronounce GNU as “ga-noo”, it doesn’t make sense as a word. In those cases, I just spell them out.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

No. I’ve never seen an english word resembling this type of spelling, so I just say each letter.

To each their own, imo my way reduces the risk of confusion. There’s no way to misinterpret what I mean when I say G-N-U rather than g’nue

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Well thats the thing, generally if I see an acronym and have to ask myself how it would be pronounced as a word, by my rule I just spell it out.

For a great example of this (unrelated to FOSS), look at LGBTQIA+. Even though it’s a mouthful to say each letter individually, no one wrestles it into “Leguhbuht’kwia plus”, it just doesn’t make sense and saying it that way would probably ellicit a dead stare from whoever heard it. Unless it’s painfully simple to morph into a word or single syllable, I don’t bother.

I’m not trying to say this is the right way, mind you. It’s just the way that makes the most sense to me.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Well I’ll be, I humbly stand corrected. I will don the dunce cap for this one

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

How to actually get games running:

Download steam, make an account, log in. Go to the settings, find “Steam Play” and enable for unsupported titles. This enables Proton, which is a customized version of Wine, a Windows-Linux translation layer, plus some extra tweaks specifically for gaming. This lets you play the vast majority of all Windows games on Steam on your Linux machine.

Check out protondb to find out how compatible your chosen game is. You’ll see a rating, as well as user experiences on how well it worked, what issues they experienced, and the tweaks they made to mitigate them (take note that there is a section on each games page that is specific to the Steamdeck, Valves handheld. Not all info in this section is relevant to general PC users, so make sure you follow the more generic section).

If you look around and find a specific game that isn’t on Steam, Heroic Launcher and Lutris are your friends.

Heroic is a very nicely polished launcher for Epic Games, Amazon and GOG. It allows you to pool all three into a single library. You can use tools like winetweaks directly in the launcher, pick different Wine/proton versions per-game, etc. I’d use this as a secondary option to Steam.

Lutris also allows you to pool your games from multiple storefronts into one (Steam, Epic, EA, Ubisoft, GOG, and manually installed). Lutris can be a little complex compared to Steam and Heroic. It’s very powerful, but somewhat spartan and can also be a bit buggy in some specific instances. It’s very well suited for older games that aren’t on major storefronts, emulators, or old CD games, mainly thanks to its option to set games up via standard windows installers or add existing games by pointing lutris to their installation path.

TL;DR, Start with steam, try some cheaper/free games. A great starting point would be Valves own games, as they’re cheap and heaps of fun (Portal, Half-Life, etc). They also usually have a Linux native version so you don’t need proton (although, counterintuitively, I find Linux Native games often don’t work as well as Windows games+proton). After you get your toes wet, go for some other storefronts and library apps. Have fun and good luck, don’t be afraid to ask for help.

Easily find program name from context menu/without terminal?

I occasionally need to know the names of programs. I asked here about “Run as Administrator” being added to the context menu (like in Windows), and the response was basically “can’t be easily done”. an example is if I wish to edit a config file it cannot be done without accessing the terminal. Knowing the name...

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

xyproblem.info

People want to know because you’re asking how to do something that (whether you like it or not) is unorthodox and can cause issues. People want to know if the ROOT of your issue is solvable via orthodox means that won’t cause issues.

Even in your other post, you were asking how to run a program with sudo via a context menu, but you didn’t say why you needed to. You aren’t giving us info on the root of your problem OR end goal, only the means you want to use to get there. There could easily be a simple way to achieve your goal, but via different means. People want to help but it can be difficult for them to give directions when they don’t have a point of origin or a destination.

Not trying to be an ass, just trying to give some insight as to why you may not be getting the answers you hoped for, and why some people might seem like they’re actively avoiding giving them to you.

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Find the .desktop file for the desired program (should be in /usr/share/applications) Right click, properties, then somewhere in that window, it should show the exact command that the .desktop file invokes when launched. In that command should be the actual program name (ie, /usr/bin/firefox-esr, firefox-esr is your program name).

Alternatively, right click, “Open With”, choose a text editor, then you’ll see a couple lines of information. One of those lines of info should be that command as well.

Edit, to be fair, I’m also not a fan of Gnome’s obfuscation of program names. It may make sense for very new users, but I also found it counterproductive in certain use cases

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

My mind for mounting personally goes to foam with cutouts (making sure the foam is of an antistatic variety). This would provide a snug fit for different hardware in their assigned spaces, plus easy removal/rearrangment, and in-built shock absorption in case of drops etc. Channels could be cut in the foam to allow different connections and route them where you need.

Now, I can’t say I’ve ever built a project like this so this may not work for your needs.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Yes that was my main concern too. I suppose if you wanted to really go for it, you could also make cutouts for fans and cut some channels for airflow, but in the end aluminum panels with maybe some rubber standoffs for mounting may just be the safer option. And I suppose thubscrews for securing boards would make them easily removable

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Sounds like you’re going in a good direction. Again I’ve personally never put anything like this together, I’d be interested to see what you come up with

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Because they’re popular, and they’re super easy to slap together (graphically at least. In theory, you could make a completely text based deck builder and it would function identically to one with fancy graphics).

This is the equivilant of zombie games in the shooter genre. Why program complex ai when you could make braindead (pun intended) bots walk in a straight line at the player and deal damage when they touch them.

What distro should I use on my potato?

I have an HP Stream 11 that I want to use for word processing and some light web browsing - I’m a writer and it’s a lightweight laptop to bring to the library or coffee shop to write on. Right now it’s got Windows and it’s unusable due to lack of hard drive space for updates. Someone had luck with Xubuntu, but it’s...

bigmclargehuge, (edited )
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

This is probably the way to go. Relatively minimal install with a pretty lightweight DE. Rock-solid-stable too, so even if you update obsessively, you’re very unlikely to ever need to downgrade anything.

I actually went with this setup on a Dell M4500 and it works a treat, really gave the ol gal a second lease on life.

bigmclargehuge,
@bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world avatar

Just something to note, LXDE is no longer officially maintained by the original devs (there are some community maintainers). LXQt is the new project from those devs and still seems to be going strong.

Not saying to avoid LXDE, just that updates may be few and far between.

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