When I was in high school we didn’t know how to mix drinks so we did it half and half. I can only imagine if this contained the same ratio
Big fan of SBC gaming, open source engine recreations/source ports, gaming in general, alternative operating systems, and all things modding.
Trying to post and comment often in an effort to add to Lemmy’s growth.
When I was in high school we didn’t know how to mix drinks so we did it half and half. I can only imagine if this contained the same ratio
You might be interested in Portal on the N64 while you’re at it.
I’d check out Narbacular Drop. Pretty sure that’s the game that I’m talking about that became Portal, in a way, later.
There was a good YouTube video about it a while ago but I think it had a clickbait title that makes it hard to find.
I’m not sure. Portal and Team Fortress both have really interesting back stories that I think have a bit to do with Valve acquisitions
I think so. Installing Linux was a hurdle for a lot of people but having it by default on the Steam Deck was a bit of a game changer. Installing Windows on it versus figuring out how to use something Lutris probably takes a similar amount of effort for average casual user.
I feel like it also helps that Windows isn’t very controller friendly, in my experience, and an increasing amount of people are looking for that for couch gaming and viewing media.
I don’t think it’s required by law for a publicly traded company to increase profits. I think that’s a side effect of shareholders voting.
If Microsoft held a vote on whether or not disclose a report covering diversity I feel like the board would recommend against it and a majority of voters would agree because it could mean decreasing their stock’s value.
There is a thing called ethical investing but that can mean investing in stocks that will see lower gains.
All-in-all I feel like it depends a lot on the core of the company and what percentage of the company belongs to different people.
To be clear: I am not a professional and am drunk. This is just my two cents on the topic.
Another catalyst is one company buying another. I cannot think of one example where the acquired company’s product/services got better after a M and A.
I feel like there have been some positive outcomes of mergers and acquisitions but I am having trouble thinking of them. What comes to my mind is Meta acquiring Oculus, Activision merging with Blizzard, and Microsoft acquiring Minecraft. All of those have led to a shitty Russian nesting doll of launchers and DRM.
The positives might be harder to note though. There must have been a couple times where some kind of acquisition has brought a series into the mainstream.
I know a lot of people prefer the classic Fallout games but I do wonder how people would be aware of the series if it weren’t for Bethesda buying the right to Fallout for example.
Mostly powering off my system when I shouldn’t have. I believe one time I began the process to format a drive I didn’t mean to and when I saw the process had started I pushed the power button and just made things worse. The other times were when I was updating.
This all happened when I first started using Linux.
I wonder if there’s a lost media page for it if that’s the case
Just a heads up if you liked Xavier Renegade Angel you might like The Shivering Truth. It’s more horror oriented but I’d say almost equally surreal.
This isn’t a 64 bit versus 32 EFI issue is it?
I ran into that when I was installing Linux on an iMac a while back
In case the JPEG crusty watermark didn’t give it away this meme was stolen
Kind of unrelated but what do you like about MacOS and Linux versus Windows? I mean that in the way of things they share
I never really used a MacOS device for an extended period of time so when I did use one the differences between it and Windows/Linux really slowed me down and confused me.
I suppose that makes sense. I feel like that might lead to a lot of unnecessary reports. Like if one instance doesn’t allow right-wing or NSFW content but federates with one that does. If a user reports it then the other community/instance is going to hear about it. It’s easy to ignore but legitimate reports might get swept up with them.
I’m using Reddit in the same way I use Yahoo answers. It’s an option to passively get answers to questions I have without routing through search engine optimized websites trying to sell me something. If something better comes along I’ll definitely use it.
I’m downvoting your comment because it doesn’t add anything to the conversation or my question.
Wicked. Thanks for your help. This is definitely what I was looking for.
This looks like what I’ve been looking for.
Is it really as simple as doing this?
I’d say for the most part. The Arch Wiki does a decent job at least pointing users in the right direction. The path to solving it may be a bit different. For example you may need to find the equivalent package on Mint and it might have a different name.
Are you trying to import content? I don’t think there’s a way to do that. There might be a way to mass download content posted by a user but I feel like that’s probably it. I don’t even know if there is a tool for doing what I mentioned for Lemmy.