That sounds like either LN or LW (Lawful Wangrod)
Programmer by day, burnt out by night.
That sounds like either LN or LW (Lawful Wangrod)
Honestly, it would’ve been better for me if OP shared the text instead of a (slightly blurry) screenshot.
No reason to hate acronyms; they make communication much more efficient!
They are annoying when you’re not in the clique that knows about them, I’ve found they can be hard to look up.
we dont have the K, just the regular
Ah, my bad (^^;
I ran an i7-4790K in my gaming PC for a long time, as far as games go this 10-year old CPU still hold up well, never had to upgrade it surprisingly enough!
Still, a 4 GHz quad-core with hyper-threading, and about 8 GiB of RAM, is more than enough to run Windows 10.
Assuming these are for studying, the heavier workloads would consist of MS Word, Powerpoint and an instructional video in the webbrowser, no?
What required tasks were too heavy for these computers under Windows 8/10?
And do they run off SSDs, or spinning HDDs?
Little side note
those computers in question had either i5-4750 (I think?) or i7-4970 so running windows 10 with all its bloat was not going to be an easy task
The i7-4790K is still quite powerful, so I’m pretty sure this wasn’t the problem, at all. Perhaps they’re running on an HDD, have little RAM, or you got the CPU wrong.
You can see the CPU and RAM by launching System Info from tbf start menu, and see if it’s running on an SSD or HDD by launching Disks from the menu.
It is better NOT to put them in system directories since those will get overwritten by upgrades.
That’s a purely Atomic thing, isn’t it?
So instead of porn being streamed at Italian politics, the Italian politics are at a porn stream!
Neato!
Unless someone ticked the “encrypt storage”-box in the installer, you don’t even have to pay for Pro to use it!
Real!
After installing and restoring Arch for the third time in 1.5 year I decided to go back to Mint. In the past 5.5 or so years, nothing needed to be reinstalled or restored; Mint’s more stable than Windows by now!
My first was Ubuntu in a VM because everyone recommended it, I distro hopped in VMs until I just ended up using Mint in a VM almost exclusively. It was when I complained to someone about the issues with the VM when locking the laptop and they asked me “Why not just run that system as-is?” that I installed it for real.
I’ve also used Manjaro for half a year, a very minimal Arch+i3 install (without the install script because I wanted the “real experience”) for about 1.5 year, and dual booted Bazzite and Mint on my gaming PC for a year (it’s just Mint now), all the while trying out other distros big and small on older hardware or in VMs.
I don’t feel I’ve found “the one”, but somehow I keep coming back to Mint… Although, perhaps NixOS is it… Who knows?
I’ve seen it usually works well.
I believe you do have to change the slashes in the checksum files and run wine setup.exe
in the folder, after that it should have a desktop shortcut just like on Windows.
You should also be able to add it as installed game to Lutris.
Take it with a grain of salt, I haven’t tried it myself, though.
Just adding that Tekken 7 and 8 run better under Linux with Proton than under Windows, and that modding is just as easy!
Shogun 2: Total War also runs fine under Linux with Proton, but I couldn’t get it to run on Windows, anymore (Flash).
So it really depends on your game.
…without any repercussions, So Far™
Yeah well, a remake means they made the game again. It’s a new game, with the same content. That does mean it runs a new engine, and has modern-sized textures and models.
Perhaps they could optimise the game a bit more, I’ve always thought an installer that let’s you choose wether to install the downsized 1080p assets or the full-size 4k assets would’ve been nice to have but alas.
Nor models.
And oh look, those make up everything that isn’t music or UI!
Old game runs needs less powerful hardware than new game
Good lord, did you figure that out all by yourself‽ /s
The vast majority of these rpm records are not copyrighted. The same happened before when they were losing lawsuits over the books they archive, the vast majority of them weren’t copyrighted and almost none of them were published by the sueing publishers.
This isn’t about copyright as they would have you believe, this is about information being publicly accessible rather than controlled by corporations.
True, but saying Brew is unsafe but Flatpak isn’t, isn’t too odd, either.
I get that it’s less secure, but using verified flatpaks beats homebrew by a large margin.
Honestly, he probably just forgot and found a random slip of paper with a note on it while moving or something.