When I said 3rd party I meant non mojang jars, not hosting providors
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Not when compared to the third party servers. Not only do they run better but they give the option of using plugins or mods to further improve performance and enhance gameplay.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How often do you run backups on your system?English41·4 months agoWeekly full backup, nightly incremental
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Challenge : The most convoluted way to run a Windows app ?42·6 months agoI don’t remember the exact process but I ran Linux on computer A and windows on computer B. I installed windows onto a second drive on computer B and set Virtual box on computer A to use that drive as its boot drive over the network. I then shared the primary drive as well so I could boot computer B into either Windows install and run the other as a VM on Computer A.
I have no idea why I did this but it worked and no one was impressed.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•With all this ghostty talk. Am I out of touch for still using terminator all these years?4·6 months agoFrom a look at the documentation it’s just a fancy terminal. If you don’t really care about theming or image rendering then it’s not something you need. If you’re trying to rice a UI like hyprland then it looks like a good option.
Personally, I don’t see much added value over whatever the default terminal is but I’ve never been one to mess with things that do what they are supposed to.
I had a hell of a time trying to use Gmail and exchange email from the terminal clients I tried. Mostly because of security features. I never got it working but aerc looked really nice.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Am I being held back by using casaos?English5·7 months agoIf you want to learn more, then you will need to move away from casa. Casa is pretty much just a collection of custom docker images that play well together and with their interface. You could grab an old computer, install Linux, and do more but you would expend more time and effort.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•There are sane people with this many VMs on a personal machine, right? RIGHT?3·9 months agoNah, most of the windows ones don’t get updates any more and the Linux ones can get a script that updates on boot. Takes longer to start up but handles the job itself.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Open Source@lemmy.ml•WinampDesktop/winamp - Licence violates github TOS · Issue #619·9 months agoI feel like this repo is bait. The license is bad and violates the TOS but if they can convince a judge that it’s legally binding then they already have over a hundred targets who have forked it. They really messed up by including the shoutcast source and some Dolby code, although the Dolby stuff is questionable.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•Can a Linux installation be run as a VM in Windows?4·10 months agoI did this back in 2008 using virtual box. Had a dual boot system and got curious as to whether or not I could boot the Linux partition as a VM. I don’t remember it being difficult to do but this was before EFI and secure boot so those may cause trouble. I’m not 100% sure I used virtual box either :/
The Linux-libre Wikipedia entry sums it up pretty well:
“According to the Free Software Foundation Latin America, Linux-libre is a modified version of the Linux kernel that contains no binary blobs, obfuscated code, or code released under proprietary licenses.[7] In the Linux kernel, they are mostly used for proprietary firmware images. While generally redistributable, binary blobs do not give the user the freedom to audit, modify, or, consequently, redistribute their modified versions. The GNU Project keeps Linux-libre in synchronization with the mainline Linux kernel.[8]”
Basically; some stuff in the kernel is either not free or not open but is included for convenience.
I appreciate how Valve does this. They ask, they let you know how its used, its not associated with individual accounts, you can view the info submitted before it gets submitted.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•From Windows to about 6 recommended distros for gaming.1·1 year agoYou would think so but that didn’t work
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•From Windows to about 6 recommended distros for gaming.4·1 year agoYeah, POP has its nvidia version that comes with it installed. I was using that til I switched to AMD and just reinstalled the OS instead of dealing with removing the nvidia stuff.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Self Hosted - Self-hosting your services.@lemmy.ml•[Question] Why is Matrix mentioned more often than XMPP in self hosted forums?2·1 year agoIm 100% with you. If I were going to set one up it would probably be XMPP. However I havent dug into the features of each to do a proper analysis on which would suit my needs because I have no need for a chat service right now.
Spoken like a true League of Legends player
I didn’t know that. I usually recommend LXDE because I have used it for a really long time. LXQt is also a great option, I haven’t used it in a few years but I remember it being nice and lite.
Dagamant@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.ml•Microsoft starts testing ads in the Windows 11 Start menu2·1 year agoI have Pinta, it’s ok but lacks a lot of the plugins I used and hasn’t been too stable. The graphics editing thing is something that will,just take time for me to rework my workflows. Gimp is great, I’m just not used to it.
about 20 years ago. Early 2000s I started messing around with Redhat and was suprised that a full OS that did most of the windows things was available for free. when Ubuntu gained traction I jumped on that and tried distro hopping a bit before landing aolidly on Debian derivatives as my linux of choice. I remember catching a ban in WoW because WINE was detected by their anti cheat for a while.