

Yeah. Weird vibes.


Yeah. Weird vibes.


Tssssssssss


Question mark?


Sometimes I wonder how much dirt Israel has on world politicians to allow them to keep getting away with their flagrant shit


germs
What?


Nice! CachyOS and Nix are on my bucket list but I’m content with fedora atm. Used to run the CachyOS kernel on fedora before though. I think it’s an interesting choice to enable LTO for the entire kernel, and the performance was top notch! Too bad it broke my kernel headers package which broke the nvidia drivers so I had to cut my losses and purge everything back then.


What distro, and how do you like it compared to windows so far? (And I’m assuming you’re not using Arch since you didn’t say anything)


I just put “[object Object]” in one of the survey fields when I don’t like the company.


Ahahahahaha


Yeah. I’m not buying another train from them ever again


My bad, a Farady Shield works just as well and it doesn’t need holes. But I was thinking about ways to combat this while posting and a solution involving conductive fabric was going through my head during that moment.


First of all: cardboard does NOT block electromagnetic waves. You need a Faraday Cage for that. And even then, it has to have holes of a certain size to block specific wavelengths/frequencies. It’s why you have a mesh on the door of your microwave for example.
Secondly: they’re not attempting to photograph you. Just identifying your unique signature once would allow them to track your location anywhere where they have the gear installed.


Wait… so the guys with tinfoil hats were on to something?


Oof. I didn’t realise that and assumed it was some new fancy hardware.
My original comment still stands though. The HWE (hardware enablement) kernels on Debian and its derivatives like Ubuntu/Mint are your best bet when it comes to new or obscure hardware. They link extra drivers into the kernel and have patches to fix issues you normally wouldn’t encounter, basically stuff they won’t include in the mainstream kernel for the sake of stability or whatever. I always used these kernels before I migrated to Fedora because the extra keyboard buttons on my laptop wouldn’t work otherwise.


It all depends on the context to be honest. I’ve found that tech people, outside of professional contexts, are generally a lot more helpful. Things are different at work.


That’s exactly how protondb works. And you also get hardware and distro information.
You can search and filter reports by all of the aforementioned criteria for any game that’s listed.


Did this happen to you in particular? Most tech oriented people (and Linux users by extensions) are generally chill
Exactly