HERRAX

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Ah, then I seen, thanks for the clarification! (I blame not being a native English speaker)

Yeah it's a crappy situation where keeping the damn thing actually seems like the least shitty thing to do for now. At least I've managed to convince others to buy alternatives like the Hyundai Ioniq series instead when they've asked me for my opinion!

[–] [email protected] 13 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I'm in a similar position, having a 2019 M3 bought back in the days of blissful ignorance of who Musk even was pretty much.

I'm not wealthy in any way, I spent very hard earned cash for a green(er) car due to extensive travel requirements at work. I can not just sell the car for pennies and get a new electric car.

So for me, I have pretty much no reasonable alternative other than to ride it out, use non-tesla-chargers, and get a new non-tesla car in a couple of years when hopefully the price of electric cars have declined.

So please don't judge those of us who are in this shitty position too hard. I'm not in any way looking for some kind of pity (god knows even affording the car in the first place makes me very privileged), but for some understanding and to make it known that plenty of us "old Tesla car"- drivers do not affiliate in any way with Musk's views and opinions.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Great, give me an alternative then.

Afaik, except for steam only Itch even has a native Linux client for starters? EGS is a pos software that doesn't even have an "appear as offline" mode and bleeds money while still taking a 12% cut. And Epic is not a small indie company trying to break into the market.

Steam workshop, their VR integration, their work with Proton for Linux, Steam marketplace, the ease of generating keys for resellers without the 30% cut, great mobile app/interface, actually good storefront browsing, the list just goes on with things Steam does better than any competitor, and that's just a few examples of where the 30% cut is going (ofc they still make absolute bank on top of this).

But regulating this to something insane like 5% would definitely make us lose out on several of these features, not to speak about future features.

[–] [email protected] 22 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Dude, unless you've ever tried publishing your own game you should stop parroting stuff you hear online. I've released a (borderline shovelware) game I made for educational purposes, and steam is god damned amazing and has such good support for a novice like myself. On the complete opposite of what you're claiming, the gamers and indie companies stand to gain the most from a service like steam.

It's not surprising that it's more or less only people from huge companies like blizzard and Ubisoft who complain and try to gaslight Valve. If I were to release a game again I'd rather publish it on steam if they took 60% of the cut than anywhere else. (Unless you want to pay me a godly amount of money for exclusivity Epic Games, then hmu lol)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I've been getting fairly good battery life on arch and popOS on my laptop. Think it depends a bit on what laptop you've got as well. If I were to guess I'd say my current pop install gets ~10% less battery life than on windows, while I was probably even closer than that on arch after a bit of tinkering.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Imo it's been very easy. I recommend starting out by installing it on old hardware you don't care about anymore, or in a VM, just to get a feel for if it's something you feel is worth your time getting into, and if you want to keep using it, you can dual boot it along with windows. I particularly recommend PopOS as a great Linux distro to start out with, as it's a simpler and in most ways better fork of Ubuntu.

As it doesn't cost more than your time, and as long as tinkering with stuff like this is something you're at least somewhat interested in, I don't see any reason not to try it out again. But as with everything, there's no guarantee Linux is perfect for your use cases and you might be better off with windows, so don't feel bad for sticking with it if that's the case for whatever reason!

 

Hello everyone!

I'm using a 4k 48" TV as a monitor, and want to scale the screen down to 3440x1440 / 21:9 with black bars on the top and bottom. I've managed to do this with the AMD Adrenaline software on my Windows partition, but when I tried to create a custom resolution on my EndeavourOS partition with xrandr, the screen just goes black whenever I apply it.

Has anyone here been succesful doing this, or have any tips? Thanks!

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