Yeah, this guy doesn’t know enough drug dealers and only fans models.
Yeah, this guy doesn’t know enough drug dealers and only fans models.
I was glad my server did this the other day to make sure the data Lemmy put into my database is secure.
You actually can poison(?) yourself by drinking too much water. Seemed to be a trend to get high a few years ago. So I guess in that scenario you actually can get addicted to water.
Thanks, my daughter wanted to download something from YouTube the other day.
OpenSUSE is that you can use it was the game ia gone far right eithee.
Ugh, I’ve got to get rid of my typos from the autocomplete.
That is absolutely not a slow laptop. If it takes a long time to boot there must be something wrong. I have a similar system that takes about ten seconds to boot.
Anyways, like others said, LVM with LUKS is the simplest. It uses your hardware to quickly decrypt the drive on boot. While it is running access to your data is protected by your login manager or lock screen.
Looks like a SUSE/Debian hybrid.
Baldur’s Gate 3 is a recent one.
@[email protected] actually made it.
Stay away from the Thinkpad T580 with the Geforce MX150. It’s horribly throttled and can’t even run Quake 3 properly although it should actually be capable of running Doom 2016.
Might be the same with the T480.
That’s more or less what a virtual machine does. And I bet cheating programs do as well.
Now that’s a shit post.
GCompris and Minetest or Minecraft are top.
At it’s simplest you just start the programs with Wine. So when you have Wine installed you can just select to run an exe file with Wine. By itself it will install them to a hidden folder where a mock-Windows-folderstructure is created and add entries to your start-menu equivalent.
Most people use helper apps that add a separate mock-Windows environment for every program. Makes it easier to manage them, especially if one program needs different settings from another to work.
Bottles is such a helper for general programs. Heroic is mostly for GOG and Epic games. Lutris generally for games. And Steam uses it’s own Wine version Proton automatically for verified games and you can trivially configure it to automatically use it for every Windows game.
Look at https://protondb.com for games and https://appdb.winehq.org/ for general programs.
And in reality they’re all just in the 2.6 branch. I still remember the transition from 2.4.
This seems to be similar to Freedoom.