My Ender3v2 always has some new problem to deal with. It’s cheap but it’s a pain in the ass.
My Ender3v2 always has some new problem to deal with. It’s cheap but it’s a pain in the ass.
DLSS is extremely noticeable to me at stronger levels. I usually turn it on but keep it set to “quality” instead of “performance”. It’s still slightly noticeable but not that bad at that setting.
Stronger DLSS just looks like blurry mush to me.
I sometimes use VPN software like LogMeInHamachi or Tailscale to play Minecraft multiplayer with friends over the internet.
Basically it makes your computers act as if they are on the same LAN. It should work for playing any game with LAN multiplayer support over the internet.
Yes but you don’t have anything to make power to charge it :/
It’s naive to think you can’t be influenced into buying things you wouldn’t otherwise.
Also there’s the matter of pricing: they’ll get you to pay as much as possible, either by pushing more expensive versions or by actually changing the price you see on websites like Amazon.
They are using the info to engineer more efficient ways to separate you from your money. It’s not a benefit to you in any way.
uBlacklist is an excellent add on anyway
FOSS lightweight ”virtual machine” (it’s not quite a VM but it’s similar conceptually. It’s much lighter on your system than a VM).
Easy to install, setting it up for your use case may take some coding if it isn’t common (bash scripting experience will help).
The clock hands move right when at the top but left when at the bottom.
Honestly this is kinda good press IMO. When the people who actively do have something to hide are using a given privacy tool, that tool probably works.
I have a 4k120hz gaming monitor and I have some HDMI cables that don’t support that quality.
I also just use DisplayPort because it’s better anyway (e.g. lower latency).
Good enough 90% of the time makes 99.9% of the money so why bother making things perfect for the power users?
Milky Way (Explore) by Ben Prunty from FTL: Faster Than Light
Hmm maybe I’ll look into it again. The concern had something to do with having to spoof a serial number. I own Final Cut and would love to have the beefy GPU and CPU in my desktop accelerate it, but also am very afraid of losing my main account with that and a lot more. Already my current workflow is to render on my old MacBook as uncompressed, then transfer it to my desktop and use FFMPEG to compress. Better results and much faster than trying to have my MacBook do any sort of video compression.
Inkscape is for vector graphics, GIMP is for pixel graphics. You probably want to use a combination of both for many situations (design the logo in Inkscape, touch it up and scale it in GIMP).
From my experience, GIMP is close to par with Photoshop in terms of both features and user friendliness. Inkscape is unfortunately much harder to use than Illustrator.
I got macOS running in a VM on my Linux desktop. But then I didn’t want to connect my main iCloud account because I have heard they may ban you if you they detect you are doing stuff like this.
Without an iCloud account I can’t really do the stuff I actually would want to use macOS for, like using Apple’s movie editing software, or making iPhone apps with XCode. The default mail app is nicer than any alternative for Linux I’m aware of, at least.
Not Gwen specifically, but I’d recommend seeking mental health resources to anyone who has been exposed to League of Legends.
lol your VPN company is going to kick you the instant you turn on LOIC through them. Your packets wont even get to the target site because you are basically attacking your own VPN.
Sunshine captures the screen at whatever its native resolution is, and streams it to Moonlight at whatever resolution is requested by Moonlight.
If you are trying to dynamically change the resolution things are rendered at, thats not going to be easy. Sunshine might not be the right tool.