

Try searching with the IMDB titleID instead (tt1707386
)
Try searching with the IMDB titleID instead (tt1707386
)
And the house always wins.
I use them as coasters for drinks.
Universal link so that you remain on your own instance: https://threadiverse.link/dubvee.org/post/3788765
Godspeed to @ptz@dubvee.org, hopefully we’ll meet again virtually some day 🫡
So where did they bounce back?
As long as WoW64 is not ready for primetime, I agree.
If Fedora drops support for 32bit packages, Steam, Proton, and more will no longer work, and all Fedora derivatives become useless for gaming.
That is until Valve make the Linux Steam client proper 64-bit (which hopefully will happen sooner than later), and Wine/Proton don’t have to depend on 32-bit/multilib at the Linux host level, that’s what the WoW64 subsystem is for.
That will definitely break Linux-native 32-bit games though.
I dunno, the concept of an immutable OS is definitely interesting, and I don’t believe Arch or Ubuntu currently offer that.
Seems like a good reason for the Wine / Proton WoW64 subsystem to improve.
AFAIK, you couldn’t run 16-bit software on native Windows x64, so Wine is exhibiting the same behavior.
Anyway, these 16-bit softwares are old enough that running them in DOSBox or something like that won’t show any significant performance penalty through emulation vs translation.
I thought the Steam Linux client was already native 64-bit?
If not, maybe this is the kind of push needed to get them to actually go full 64-bit?
I hope there is some pressure to cut this monopolistic bullshit. The permission system is there, no need for an extra watchdog.
TL;DR: The first test was a total disaster and my phone wasn’t located until an hour after it was back next to me.
There’s Torzu if you’re interested
For Blu-Ray it’s slightly more complex (libbdplus and libaacs) plus a keydb list, but the concept is the same.
I paid Plex Pass Lifetime for peanuts (maybe $50 or $75) a decade ago, not using it would mean wasting that so yeah…
I also had all the Pebble, and technology has come a long way since.
The incoming Pebble revival uses the nRF52840 chip, which they estimate the battery life to around 30 days, from the usual 7 days.
I settled on something a bit more classic, I bought a Casio GBD-200 which has bluetooth connectivity, can display basic notifications and do some step counting. It works on a CR2032 battery that lasts about 2 years, no recharge needed.