IonAddis

joined 2 years ago
[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 31 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

As a writer, this is why I'll never condemn cozy books with happy endings. This type of media, whether it's games or books or music, helps real people get through crappy times intact, even if elitists sneer that overly happy stuff isn't this or that. Usually people who are going through the worst times irl are the ones who need avenues of escape most. If you're already living through crap, you don't need media to remind you of the crap, you already know good and well that crappy things exist.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 4 points 5 months ago

I'm curious about two things. Will nesting birds or animals find this material tasty or good to gnaw on?

I always ask that ever since I learned vehicles using a more organic plastic for wiring harnesses suffer from shorts due to animals like mice nibbling the plastic because it smells tasty.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 7 points 7 months ago

Instead of nine lives, it has ten venom claws, and one breaks every time it stings. Once it's out of claws, its dead.

You can't tell if it makes buzzing noises or purring noises.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 8 points 9 months ago

Just so anyone reading knows....some games with Linux binaries sometimes run better using proton and the windows binaries.

Crusader Kings 3 is buggy with Linux binaries but fine using proton, while Stellaris is the reverse for me. Ymmv.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 50 points 9 months ago (6 children)

I've been trying to move to Linux for about 20 years, but gaming issues always sent me back to Windows.

I tried again after hearing about how proton and steamdeck have made it so much easier for most games and it's true. Been exclusively on Linux on my gaming rig since about September. The only one I couldn't get working was oddly a little simple indie game, it lagged badly while stuff like No Man's Sky and Cyberpunk ran fine.

Microsoft is pushing this at a very bad time, because you CAN game on Linux now.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 3 points 10 months ago

Yeah, I've had such an easy time of it that I'm actually surprised when a game doesn't work in Linux now too. Which is a reverse of how it used to be.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 5 points 10 months ago

I switched from Windows to Linux in the last year.

There are sometimes odd things to configure, but it's no more difficult than the windows XP era was.

It is much much easier than Linux used to be due to Steam, and I find I more often have problems with smaller indie games than big ones.

I've been playing Cyberpunk, Baldurs Gate 3, Stellaris, No Man's Sky, Crusader Kings 3 no problem. Plus many others.

I tried to game on Linux for many years with wine, but it was Steam that actually made it feasible for me .

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

Like in a file?

Bitwarden already syncs between PC and phone.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 18 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Well, when a mommy and daddy hat bobble love each other very much...

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 7 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Is this a nostalgia thing? Like how people who grew up without records now get vinyl for the looks or nostalgia of a time that was better or something?

The downside of optical disks for me was how easily they got scratched, plus you have to store them somehow (a big physical library takes up actual physical space, like the wall of a room), plus you have to get up and physically move something to play it. If you're a super-neat person, perhaps this won't be downside (I am not, and still have rips of a CD that used to be in my car and got scratched, so the rip has a part marred by skipping).

Also, are ordinary blu-rays kept in ordinary home conditions (that is to say, not archival and not climate-controlled or pitch-black) going to hang onto their data for 20+ years? Or is continually moving it to new SSDs and thinking about raid setups a better defense against data loss for an ordinary home media user? I remember vividly having old CDs and floppies that would not run years later due to becoming corrupted by physical media decay.

Anyway, I have no answers, just want to put some thoughts out there.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 15 points 11 months ago (1 children)

This article is worth reading just for the perfect quotes from the couple. I'm American and can still hear the accent they're said in.

[–] IonAddis@lemmy.world 110 points 1 year ago

It legitimately surprised me back when Russia first attacked Ukraine how parts of the internet suddenly reverted in tone to how the early 2000s internet used to be. The posts pushing subtle division in random message forums just stopped for a few days.

Really made me realize how pervasive the social engineering of English speakers by outside agencies has become online. I think about it much more, using that brief cessation as a touchstone. Like, my memories of forums being saner weren't false, heh.

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