4k works great on most TV devices, that’s where they expect people are consuming it. I think the crux of the complaint is actually that they don’t make any of that clear before you waste money on it.
4k works great on most TV devices, that’s where they expect people are consuming it. I think the crux of the complaint is actually that they don’t make any of that clear before you waste money on it.
I’m still in the middle of a K8s migration. It’s overkill for a home user, but I want the upskilling.
I’ve got a QNAP NAS with self-managed linux for storage, and a MS-01 with an RTX A2000 for compute. They’re connected over 10Gb SFP+. I’m more than half way done, especially considering I mostly know what I’m doing now.
I still need to figure out the idiomatically right way to schedule pods with their storage, but I got GPU workloads going recently. Next up is migrate the last of the docker-compose from the storage node.
It’s not open source, unavailable on non-apple platforms, and (ironically) needs something like Plex for remote playback.
I don’t understand the logistics of possessing 1800 books. That is so many books. Did you live in a library?
One last suggestion would be to try a Wayland session instead of X. I wouldn’t be surprised if it improves the blurriness.
Aside from that, I also have a Framework 13 with the same display and Fedora’s real nice on it 😆
You probably know this, but for those who don’t; that is only FSR 1.0, which is generally not very good but can still be much better than a basic upscaler. If the game has native FSR support, you should always use that instead.
If these are Steam games, the Steam flatpak has gamescope available.
I would use gamescope for this: gamescope -W 1440 -H 960 -f -- %command%
I use the game’s FSR for this if it’s available though. FSR Performance halves the render resolution, and scales the output 2x.
Arch has a useful doc for it https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Gamescope
The Famicom (Japanese NES) release was closer to WW2 than today.
looks at post history I mean lazy as my joke was, now I understand how you got so upset about it.
You say you got the joke, but everything else you said suggests you didn’t. Just to be clear I wasn’t being critical of your reply, I was mocking the cryptobros the other poster mentioned.
sounds too simple bro, what it needs is more blockchain /s
💯 I see it the same way.
Yes, that’s one half of what I was getting at. The other half is that it doesn’t prioritise aesthetics.
Listen prioritises aesthetics, but is lacking in function. For me, the missing functionality isn’t important.
There’s no single right answer.
The official app could be described as “functional”. This is a native android app and (imo) looks better.
That article is so bad. While still debatable, what he actually said wasn’t anything like it’s been represented.
On Debian 12 we could simply install the backport kernel and the performance issues were solved.
Decent list and plan overall. Since you enjoy self hosting and seem systems oriented, I’d add Python on the curriculum somewhere. That would round things out nicely for you.
Is port 22 accessible and pointed at it? You could also run it on an alternate port and specify that port in your ssh config.