Who would dare to ask why
By the amount of exploits and privilege escalations he pulls off (and the fact that everything is stuck in 1999) I'm almost positive that the matrix is running on some sort of WindowsNT
Y'all chill a bit.. Saw this post 4 hours ago, rushed a job to hop in and i just checked helldivers.io and its already liberated!
Thanks for this! I have been using HA for a year now but only with stuff I already had on my network and a few Wiz lights. The whole ZigBee zwave thing has been a pending rabbit hole to fall into for a while and this was been an interesting read.
No need, at least on Firefox you can hold down shift (or alt? I never remember) + right click to bypass such restrictions
IIRC Uber has patented dynamic pricing based on a ton of data, including your phone battery being low. I wouldn't be surprised if they hiked your fare just because you were on the car shop.
Obviously they say its not in use but who could check
Edit: some further reading https://www.hbs.edu/ris/Publication%20Files/22-050_ec28aaca-2b94-477f-84e6-e8b58428ba43.pdf
Ffs i only olayed one match of Starship Troopers... Im getting dismembered by an oversized animstronic alien ant
Made the switch way before any kind of support from steam, had several games from aspyr and feral, bought a codeweavers license and all that. For me at keast it's about the lack of interruptions and actually enjoying the workflow on gnome. I also love the idea of fetting in touch directly with the people making the programs I enjoy and not a random support rep on the other side of the world.
On the other hand, you should probably take a deeper look at steam. There are a ton of extra modifications you can do to the client, all of them unofficial and some straight up illegal, from changing the theme to injecting enhancements on the store (e.g. displaying protondb score on store pages) to aome shady shit like unlocking DLC. Steam is DRM but it's not denuvo or something like that. It's easily circumventable to the point I feel safe buying games on it, knowing if they ever go for a rug pull, I could keep most if not all my stuff regardless of the platform itself.
There's a key point in the article that emphasizes that valve are indeed "being nice": their policy is " upstream everything".
Yes the motives are still keeping a foot out in case Microsoft decides to screw them over in some way, but they could (as many companies do) keep the improvements all for themselves, buy developers and make a closed source version of any of the tech they have been funding, locking down steamOS to only allow steam games and so on.
Kenshi pretty much fits that request a 100%
I consider it a win nontheless, people like me or you, who were actively engaged on reddit and did "what felt right" (deleting comments and leaving reddit) are probably the kind of people that might make for good conversation and good content (be it links to cool stuff, art, or just rants).
We might get some "bad apples" (trolls, botters, and such), but all in all, I see it as a far healthier alternative to grow gradually from a core of users that was either here from the start, or that moved to the Fediverse to take back a bit of the "old web" feel, where people come together to share cool stuff and ideas.
RIP Aaron Swartz, we'll keep the old reddit spirit here on Lemmy.
Tell me about it. I've got movies with the Spanish title, and the LatAm cover art with yet another title. Ended up switching Jellyfin to English just to be able to find my movies