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I've gamed since 1979 and have used nVidia on Linux since the early 2000's...without issue.

I only update my rig ever 8-10 years. Saves money though I tend to then play the older games, which is OK for me. I've had a 3080 for 3 years and it still feels like a new card.

> if you don't sell your games on Steam or in a way I can run them on Linux I am not buying or playing them.

Agree 1000% and recently Steam Community Support pissed me off so I am now looking into GOG (I have my first GOG game now and playing it), Epic and Luna. In fact, the GOG game I got was free through Luna ironically. Even more ironic, the excellent Heroic game launcher lets you mark the game to show up in Steam, then when you start steam run it from there and it uses the config settings from Heroic but you can use screenshots, etc. in Steam.

The gaming landscape on Linux is great, except for those companies that refuse to support anti-cheat.

I run Kubuntu btw (and Ubuntu since 2006).


> while the Play store is an equally ad-riddled

That made me realize how little I go to the Play store these days to just browse compared to the early days of Android.

I personally can't stand Apple products ... dbut with Google doing their crap and Samsung acting like Microsoft with all the crap they load in I have to disable just to make the phone usable; I've seriously thought about moving to iPhone the past couple of years.


I appreciate the nostalgia of it but DPII was a light themed tool, this one is dark themed, difficult for me to read.

I run DPII in DoxBox on Linux like this:

dosbox DP.EXE

Something I don't see in your app is the Perspective tool.


> the government has favored the car infrastructure over the last decades

It was a combination of federal push for highways and consumer demand for greater distance and easier travel.


Also, federal highways are partially a national security issue, and are designed for quickly moving military equipment across otherwise isolated areas. Guidelines for federal interstates are specified jointly with the DoD to ensure that military transport can fit under bridges, and that bridges can support their weight. Industry is the other most important user, while individual consumers/families are the least considered users.

Everyone always assumes that individual choices and consumer behavior drives this stuff, and then they wonder why nothing changes even though we all started using reusable tote bags and LED bulbs. Stop blaming the consumer!

(The DoD is the largest institutional polluter in the world, by the way.)


That is very interesting. It is funny to see how influential the federal government has been on society, infrastructure and other areas of life. Specially considering that some people opposed to it during the confederation period because they saw it as another centralized authority (anti-federalist papers).

trains are pretty good at that too I hear

Trains are cheaper per mile but are less flexible and easier to sabotage. They are also important but there’s a reason that every country with a powerful military maintains both options.

Not in Texas, they're not viable for most uses, the parent commenter is completely correct.

The same is true for many states in the US, perhaps even most of the US.


Agree. Texas is pretty bad. In most places you cannot exist without a car. No wonder Mcallen is the most obese city the US.

Hence the last sentence of my post:

> Advocate for safe biking infrastructure in your area.

We built dangerous highways. We can build bikeways as well.


When AWS rolled out plans to start charging for IPv4 addresses:

https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/new-aws-public-ipv4-address...

"As you may know, IPv4 addresses are an increasingly scarce resource and the cost to acquire a single public IPv4 address has risen more than 300% over the past 5 years. This change reflects our own costs and is also intended to encourage you to be a bit more frugal with your use of public IPv4 addresses and to think about accelerating your adoption of IPv6 as a modernization and conservation measure."

Their move disgusted me and I moved from AWS to OCI.


What disgusted you about it? I'm out of the loop

They hadn't bothered to add ipv6 support to most of their services and the ones that did have it usually were only dual stack - still requiring an ipv4 address.

They didn't require you to have a public IPv4 address. Just an IPv4 address.

Which requires dual-stack and all the issues that come with it, especially with private addresses.

That sounds like a failure in every direction. I see why you moved

It was clearly a corporate money grab, not an altruistic motion as they made it sound.

>it's probably not a great time to be a very middling pure CRUD web app developer

Businesses don't pay for CRUD apps, businesses pay for apps that solve problems which often involves CRUD to persist their valuable data. This is often within the sometimes very strange and difficult to understand business logic which varies greatly from one business to another. That is what "CRUD app developers" actually do, so dismissing them as though there is zero business logic and only CRUD is doing them, us, a disservice.


I really wasn't referring to domain-specific CRUD development of that sort, and tried to draw attention to the distinction with the word "middling", but perhaps it was a bit too subtle.

Why, I do plenty of what you describe myself...


> It is an art.

I agree what we do requires a lot of creative thinking. When AI supporters attempt to use an argument comparing to factory workers being freed from dull laborious work by robots, the analogy falls flat on two fronts. First, there's nothing creative about that sort of work and second, because robots are highly accurate; while AI can often be just high.


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