There’s a section you’re supposed to read called readme, it’s really your fault unless you’ve never installed software from github before.
There’s a section you’re supposed to read called readme, it’s really your fault unless you’ve never installed software from github before.
just like every other executable downloaded from the Internet, man. doesn’t seem too scary
nobody says those that way in real life. I only hear people say “I went to the ATM” “I forgot my PIN”
Wow, at the start of this comment i thought you were just being overly negative, but one by one, each point crushed me a little more. it’s so sad what’s become of this once great little product. The special power supply is a complete and total deal breaker for so many reasons. that eliminated so many use cases for me. And the lack of a standard hdmi port (or even usb c video output) is just the shtty cherry on top.
wow i hope that’s not all, that’s a pretty lame update. I can’t think of even one use-case that that would be helpful for.
not to mention that it can emulate the entire switch library as well
it’s incredible how out of touch this community is with the average end user. I’d wager that MOST people don’t know how, much less want to set custom flags for every one of their games. Believe it or not people actually like using nice GUIs and rely on simple intuitive frontends, and it’s a massive failure on Valve’s part considering they’re the largest, most mainstream PC gaming platform.
if you want desktop icons just configure and install something to do that. that’s the best part about Linux is that your distro literally doesn’t matter, it’s just a good starting point to jump off and customize
looking nice and readable is just cool and good
That’s a great instinct to have in the current landscape, but keep in mind the rise of machine learning is happening. And there are a few really cool and good use-cases for it. So it might be a hindrance to yourself to automatically throw out anything to do with “AI”, you might find something cool to use it for.
For instance, as a hobbyist graphic designer, I use a local instance of Stable Diffusion these days instead of Photoshop to make quick photo edits, saving me hours of manually masking out objects and filling in the blanks.