I made the transition to Linux Mint at the beginning of the year. I just booted into Windows the other day and saw that it had been six weeks since the last time.
I’ve tried Quest 2 once at a friend’s house. I thought it was pretty neat but nothing about the experience made me want to run out and buy one or even plan to buy one in the future. I believe that unless good VR headsets come down in price significantly (sub $100) they’re never going to be more than a niche hobby.
For POS they’d be much more likely to get a tip from me if the options were $0.50, $1.00, or $1.50.
I get you. I do something similar. I love physical discs and have a healthy blu ray collection. I tend to buy older or more obscure cult movies that I’m worried may not be readily available on streaming. But I avoid DVDs specifically because of the low resolution. For some movies it just can’t be helped. Very obscure content may even only be available on VHS transfers and I’ll watch those if I’m really interested in the movie or show.
I think my DVD days are mostly done. Even with a decent upscaler (Nvidia Shield) 480p looks terrible on my 4K TV.
I have a lot of 720p movies that I watch on my 4k TV. I’m always surprised at how good they look.
I’ve been on Linux Mint for a few months now, and haven’t booted into Windows in like three weeks.
The transition has been relatively painless.
If I was stupidly rich I’d pay the entire fine to nullify the punishment to Gary. It isn’t about the money to Nintendo; it’s about making an example of him.
That’s some bullshit. I hate that they can do that. They spin it as a convenience but I’d rather update all my accounts with the new card manually.
Oh (buy) Brother!
I can get very close to 1 Gbit on Ethernet but top out at maybe 400 Mbps on wifi.
You don’t find the ads in Windows 11 valuable?
400 pages of “rusty razor blades”
I just upgraded from a 1070 to a 3060ti. The numbers definitely did not justify a 4060ti.
It does what you need it to do because it does everything. Podcast Addict is one of the most feature rich apps.
The first cable TV system in the U.S. was built in the late 1940s and had ads from day one since it was created to bring network television to communities with poor reception. Cable has always had ads.
OP has a chip on their shoulder about using Gentoo.
Yes, and interestingly the earliest cable TV in the US was built to relay broadcast channels to valleys where the signal wouldn’t otherwise reach.
iWax