I’ve tried lutris before never heard about Bottles. I’ll give it a try. Thanks!
For some reason I just can’t get warcraft 3 and StarCraft 1 running through wine
That’s because you are illiterate in the matter and want to criticize spacex for the sake of it.Unfortunately there is no current “standard” for space suits.
And that’s why we have the EU telling apple and their fanboys to eat shit and use USB-C :) without these legislators we get the chaos you mention
For consumer products I don’t agree with enforcing it through the beginning though as it might hinder innovation. But once you have a few working cases you enforce the better one
Sorry I’m not very eloquent and failed to explain myself:
What I see is that the requested “versions” don’t match when the request is made through jellyseer vs when made directly from one of the Arr.
I first noticed this when requesting through jellyseer and I’d see a file with very few peers. Then I’d do an interactive search in the respective Arr (by hand) and there were much better candidates
I’ll recheck but I think I have updated profiles
I’ll use this topic to ask a question about jellyseer if you don’t mind.
I have jellyfin, jellyseer and arr stack for my Linux ISOs. The issue is when one someone requests an ISO from jellyseer it never is the best choice in terms of peers. I can check this by doing interactive search on one of arr and seeing there was a better choice for the quality I setup. Perhaps I have some misconfiguration?
That’s not a nice thing to say. When you grow up perhaps we can continue this discussion
Not sure about java, but I migrated a fairly big c++ project knowing only the basics of Bazel. Disclaimer: I know the codebase extremely well and we don’t have any third party dependencies and the code is c++ and some python generators, validators, etc (which fits the bill for Bazel perfectly)
What I found super hard were toolchains. It’s very verbose to define a toolchain
This was solved by moving to bazel. It’s a bit more verbose and resource heavy, but the language is sane and how you structure your build code makes a lot of sense
I don’t know enough about them but how much vendor lock-in is there usually? Could I use a distribution of my choosing, or even add an extra NIC?
That’s the info I’m looking for. I wasn’t considering I would need 2.5’’ instead of 3’', besides glueing is not great That idle power is awesome though and why I was looking into SFF
I don’t need much redundancy, as I have off-site backups and in case something goes wrong I don’t need to restore the files quickly
I mean I could go the DIY route but I’m guessing it’s going to be more expensive?
I don’t have one.
This is the type of argument I expect to see on Facebook by their mostly uneducated crowds. But here on Lemmy? I thought we were a bit better than that and more rational…
These are completely independent scenarios, with different funding streams, with different problems, solutions and so on.
I don’t buy that at all. If you read about Apollo, and before that, you’ll see that simply this stuff is hard and many times you have things “half-assed” and just take the risk. Another case is the Space Shuttle…
With that said I think Boeing has been too unreliable for manned space flight. I don’t trust much the “we’re just taking time to gather more data” and this to me is the bad part about private companies: they have no compulsion to be truthful to the public.
What do you even mean as serious contender? I’ve been using Linux for almost 15 years without an issue on CPU, and I’ve used it almost only on very modest machines. I feel we’re not getting your whole story here.
On the other hand whenever I had to do something IO intensive on windows it would always crawl in these machines
I was caught by surprise and for some reason this joke clicked so much that I laughed for a while. Kudos
I also never had an accident where I needed the seatbelt