

It could probably use a review comparing with Planet Coaster 2.
It could probably use a review comparing with Planet Coaster 2.
I’m partial to a prickle of porcupines.
I’m with you.
Also great: Willow, Tombstone.
I noticed a change in your titles a few days ago. What happened to “until l forget to post Screenshots”? I don’t think you forgot, did you?
Qt is still the only excellent cross-platform desktop GUI framework.
It’s a pity that its current custodian’s commercial licenses:
This situation makes me afraid to use their commercial offerings, which in turn means they won’t get any money from me at all; I feel that I can safely use their libs only in open-source code. Their business model is their decision, of course, but I can’t help wondering if their whale-hunting approach actually nets them more money than a more accessible, lower-cost, one-time (or one-major-version) license option would. In many other industries, high sales volume reaps more profits than high price.
Thank goodness for the KDE Free Qt Foundation.
To be fair, OSS is not comparable to a sound server, and some people have a genuine need for one.
(I’ll never endorse PulseAudio, though; it’s garbage.)
I wish we had generic links for posts and comments like we do for communities. It’s problematic in several ways to have to follow an URL like this one:
Looks like others have noticed the problem as well:
That misses the point. The Last of Us Part I is Steam Deck verified, but it consumes far too many resources.
Do note that I’m not just talking about the Deck. Some hardware can run it smoothly, some can’t, but in all cases, it’s an insultingly bloated pig of a port.
Sure.
You might want to subscribe to [email protected], and browse here once in a while: https://lemmyverse.net/communities
Verified or not, I hope it doesn’t require a year’s salary of hardware and a nuclear power plant to run, like the first PC port did.
“A prickle of hoglets.”
Disappointing that it doesn’t show anything at all without javascript.
I don’t follow Meta services, but for the record, I think you’re talking about the EU Digital Markets Act and its interoperability requirements of gatekeepers.
https://digital-markets-act.ec.europa.eu/gatekeepers_en
https://digital-markets-act.ec.europa.eu/questions-and-answers/interoperability_en
FWIW, you might also consider Firefox’s built-in reader view, which can be configured to use a dark theme.