also the lack of good VR support - it’s a super hacky mess to get it working right
The Post Ninja
also the lack of good VR support - it’s a super hacky mess to get it working right
Remember kids, whatever Linux Distro you installed, it’s the wrong one…
I still have to use Word for things because LibreOffice hates tables. Every doc I have to edit explodes violently when ooened in LibreOffice, and fixing the formatting to work in LibO would take far too long for the time available to do it.
Debian stable let’s goooooo
Microsoft Flight Simulator: A whole airplane on the couch
It does, as DDR5 comes with rudimentary ECC protection builtin.
My problem is this is an AM4 system using DDR4 memory… already outdated.
last access time
If you’re running it thru the FUSE driver perhaps…proprietary ntfs drivers absolutely rip
Also make sure last access time is turned off, that is a nice auditing feature for opsec, but it slows things down for the normal user. It should be off by default above 256GB drive sizes.
“But daaad, I wanna be a three phase”
Interesting to see how many features NTFS does support
Well it definitely isn’t Chicago
Yeah, it’s quite the Poison to experience.
The whole point of this option existing is to keep the system from auto install/reboot in the middle of work. You’re telling the machine when it’s not okay to do this… so you’re the one in control.
My center differential disagrees
I hope he’s gone and cut the telemetry from this car… if not, I’d say poser.
The reason I still don’t daily Linux (that and wireless VR streaming doesn’t)
DHCP, when set up properly, makes for less work. Reservations will have the DHCP server hand out the same IP to the same hardware (MAC address) when it asks. If you have a device that is from the dinosaur age that doesn’t play nice with DHCP, then make sure you give it an address that is outside the DHCP range on the same subnet. ex: Some home routers use 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.200 as the dhcp range. Setting anything from 192.168.1.1 (or 2 if the router is on 1) to 192.168.1.99 is fine, as is 192.168.1.201-192.168.1.254 (or 253 if the router is on 254). However, by setting static ips, you have to remember those ips specifically to interconnect devices on the lan, whereas reserving via dhcp allows you to use local dns resolution to connect to devices via their hostname instead. In additon, you run the risk of ip conflicts from forgetting which device has what ip in an increasingly complex system, and if you change internet providers or routers, you have a lot of extra work to do to fix the network settings to get those static ips to connect.
Alternately, just use the link-local ipv6 address to interconnect on the lan. That doesn’t change on most devices, as it is based on the MAC address, and is always reachable on the lan.
It’s alive and kicking on standalone android thanks to Quest, but soon more android headsets that aren’t from meta are about to come out. Being able to PC VR with these is always a preference.