bruh
I just watch it on youtube.com without logging in. Sacrificing convenience and using some frontend that only work if you pray hard is not something I want to do daily-drive
Minecraft is a building game where latency does not matter as much as in shooter games. For example, if your latency is 200 ms, you can play Minecraft smoothly, while in FPS games it is unacceptable 😉
Edit: In addition, the Minecraft server can use UDP protocol to serve the server status (but only for this purpose and it is not, nor has it ever been used by the game client). In the past, it was used to display the number of players on websites with server listings, but this can be considered deprecated now – today they use the same protocol as the game client.
Does it really matter? IMO the only thing that matters is that they got rid of Windows
For phone linking you can use KDE Connect (and GSConnect if you use GNOME)
WHERE CAN I FIND ITTTTT (asking for a friend)
The tipping system in America is so broken… It’s no more than “we don’t pay our employees, feel bad for it”.
Employees, on the other hand, should be upset at their employer for such practices, not at every customer who doesn’t tip.
Thanks! Just applied these to my lemmy client 😄
Fun fact: In poland, there is the Panoptykon Foundation, which analyzes introduced laws in terms of privacy and human rights. Many laws have already been withdrawn thanks to them.
It’s just a shame that the government doesn’t do it on its own, but we need a special foundation to do it…
At first I thought you meant these “programming socks” from Linux community 😭 But still a great advice
GNOME 47 probably
bro 😭
I have never drank alcohol, despite persuasion from friends. I consider it unhealthy. Chemically, it’s a poison, and a “hangover” is the process of removing the poison.
GTA V on Steam, but not because of AntiCheat that makes the game unplayable on Linux. I just don’t like it. It’s not fun.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
quality content comment
Your brain isn’t open source. You’re a security vulnerability