Last time I tried on Debian stable it didn’t, but maybe I’m on an old ass version without the support.
Last time I tried on Debian stable it didn’t, but maybe I’m on an old ass version without the support.
Yep, staying on xorg for autokey, antimicrox, pyautogui, and TeamViewer.
That’s true for any OS install I do for myself though :)
Newer software is nice, it’s not too much trouble.


Just don’t gamble if you don’t like gambling (or if you like it too much). I never got into any skin microtransactions ever (except for a voice pack for Starcraft 2 which is something for myself and not something that other players see). I don’t play CS2 a lot, but when I do I have a good time and I just ignore all the skin stuff. It’s out of sight and out of mind. Other players show me their skins and ask if they’re cool. I don’t know man, I don’t do arts and crafts with my tools.
I bet that feels so good as the patient.


The fork is called UZDoom and it’s already in the AUR. I read the Slashdot story on this today, and there’s a little more going on here. AI code grosses people out, but the bigger issue is that it’s being used in a GPL3 project which kind of isn’t allowed. The lead dev was also being a bit of a twat and not cooperating with the community. Long live UZDoom!


Post boot time too.


Because it’s Free and reviewed by kernel maintainers, what do you mean?


Code is code. If it’s good Free code, I’ll use it. I also don’t like Microsoft and Facebook but I run their kernel code too.


I appreciate this kind of straightforward honesty.


pyautogui is scripting, but it’s dead simple. You really don’t have to learn python to use it, just copy and paste the examples and modify to your heart’s content.


When?


Protip: don’t ask, just do it.


These days the things that really differentiate distros are: installer, default desktop environment, packaging, packages.
I switched to Linux exclusively 2 years ago and I gotta say it’s been pretty awesome. Pretty much everything works without fucking around.
I changed to Linux because it’s better. Windows sucks ass.
It’s not kernel level on linux, it never prompted for admin.


This is why I’ve never liked the idea of flatpak, it really seems like the Windows way of doing things. It honestly still kind of surprises me that Linux people really wanted to download random binaries from non-trusted distributors that contain a copy of every library that software needs to run. wedontdothathere.jpg
He broke his Linux system by failing to read the warning on the screen and then blamed Linux.