They say I/O schedulers on Windows are weird.
Edit: or was it CPU schedulers? I’m sure i’ve read something about this forever ago.
Does this look optimized to you, Windows side?
How do they check that it isn’t Steamdeck? Start there. Maybe with strace?
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Yeah, less is weird there with needing the pipe.
Sys env. It adds syntax highlighting to less. Needs the highlight
tool of course, there are others.
LESSOPEN='| highlight --line-numbers -qs candy --out-format=xterm256 --stdout -i %s'
Depends on usecase and Xorg vs. Wayland. I like Niri on my Thinkpad with touchscreen, using Wayland.
If it works, you can add the rmmod and modprobe to your login. Either to your Display Manager (login screen) or, since Silverblue uses Systemd and that command needs to be run as root, create a before-login service.
This title has bad accessibility.
You’re looking for a Smartphone.
That’s a sham. Only basic stuff is open standard, the rest is proprietary extensions. Such a format can’t usually be standardized; there’s an entire Wikipedia article about MS’ shenanigans to make it happen. But MS doesn’t even keep to that ambiguous 600-pages standard anymore. Here’s fsfe’ stance to it, calling it a pseudo-standard.
Which results in basic formatting having to be reverse-engineered. Better use Open Document Format.
Wrong info, the Microsoft format is less compatible with everything else.
That is filesystem-level. Btrfs and i think ZFS? have deduplication built in.
Btrfs gave me 150 GB on my 2 TB gaming disk that way.
Xfwm. Taskbars are now wayland, but don’t autohide without the compositor supporting it.
Is that like a Ratchet & Clank clone?