

It could have looked like BL2 with a few upgrades and more physics and that would have been fine.
It could have looked like BL2 with a few upgrades and more physics and that would have been fine.
Why buy this absolute disaster of a game?
Its a recent AAA game on a modern game engine, so it probably runs awful even on top of the line hardware.
Basically every game that comes out these days in the AAA space is a horrible unoptimized mess.
Running memtest to check if it’s a RAM issue might be worth it.
Also could be overheating storage, that can cause weird issues.
I love the mouse, for me it’s far faster than remembering key shortcuts or CLI stuff, and just feels a lot more natural to use.
There is barely any overhead with a Linux VM, a Debian minimal install only uses about 30MB of RAM! As an end user i find performance to be very similar with either setup.
I run debian on everything, so I set up unattended-upgrades
for security updates and basically forget about it. Docker updates are also automatic with Komodo, just make sure databases are pinned to a major version.
For monitoring my services I use Uptime Kuma, and get an alert if a service goes down so I can fix it.
Been pretty solid for years now. Things get rebooted every month or two when I do a Proxmox upgrade and reboot the host.
Not a clue how tbh, I’m not much of a programmer.
It’s still great either way, there’s a lot of work into making it easier to use and less hassle.
An hour is crazy, something definitely isn’t right.
That said ncdu is still pretty slow, large scans can take several minutes if there are lots of small files.
I wish there was a WizTree equivalent for Linux that just loaded the MFT nearly instantly instead of scanning everything.
Only if you unlocked the bootloader first which would wipe the device. Graphene relocks the bootloader after install.
Subscriptions feed is nice, but doesn’t show other similar channels so I never discover anyone new to watch.
Display Port ftw
It really is, most people could probably be using Display Port anyways, unless trying to hook up to a TV I suppose.
Yeah, but if left unlocked then they could replace the OS or part of it without it being very obvious.
Not a thing most people just wanting better privacy need to worry about.
Not the newer version of it, they’re stuck on the older one.
In the case of these ones you just remove the LXC/VM it created.
I use a single LXC for all my docker stuff. You can use a VM too, either way works. The VM is easier to set up as docker in LXC requires a few extra steps.
Definitely don’t do one docker image per instance, the overhead on that would be insane with managing configs and updates. I can’t imagine having over 100 LXC containers that I’d have to individually update and manage!
Install Debian as a server with no GUI, install docker on it and start playing around.
You can use Komodo or Portainer if you want a webUI to manage containers easily.
If you put any important data on it, set up backups first, follow the 3-2-1 rule by having at least 2 backups in place.
The problem with stuff like yunohost is when it breaks you have no idea how to fix it, because it hides everything in the background.
Maybe I’m just wildly crazy here, but I think a $70 game from a big studio should run well.
We’re not talking some $15 early access title here that lacks optimization because it’s like 2 guys making it in their free time.