Latest Comments by Samsai
Ubuntu 20.04 has hit Beta (as have all the extra flavours) - help make it a release to remember
4 Apr 2020 at 10:54 am UTC Likes: 5
However, Ubuntu has gotten better about this. Unity is dead and buried and Mir became a Wayland compositor and is relatively irrelevant at the moment. As for Snap and Flatpak, I personally don't see an issue with the duplication there, since I don't think either project is super complicated and in critical need of developer resources.
4 Apr 2020 at 10:54 am UTC Likes: 5
Quoting: DanglingPointerComparing the number of devs in individual companies isn't necessarily a good metric either. Ubuntu has historically tried to push a lot of their own things (Mir, Unity, Snap) and in those cases the development and maintenance burden falls mainly on their developers as opposed to collaborators in existing projects or collaborators from multiple projects working on a shared solution. Basically, Canonical devs get spread pretty thin working on multiple home-grown solutions. The more interesting thing to look at is the amount of redundant work that could be avoided by collaborating with existing solutions rather than doing everything yourself.Quoting: slaapliedjeInstall base != company size.Not many dedicated developers for desktop compared to who? IBM-Redhat? Suse? System76? gLinux?
Yeah, they have a lot working on and riding on Openstack their cloud stuff. What they don't have is a lot of dedicated developers to work on their desktop system. And that's what we're talking about here, right?
If I'm not mistaken, Canonical employed desktop-developer numbers are only second to IBM-Redhat employeed numbers, with Suse 3rd.
However, Ubuntu has gotten better about this. Unity is dead and buried and Mir became a Wayland compositor and is relatively irrelevant at the moment. As for Snap and Flatpak, I personally don't see an issue with the duplication there, since I don't think either project is super complicated and in critical need of developer resources.
If you're self-isolating and in need, here's a bunch of awesome free Linux games
16 Mar 2020 at 11:00 pm UTC Likes: 1
16 Mar 2020 at 11:00 pm UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: The_AquabatSNIPIf you could stop spreading hysteria and encouraging panic buying vitamin supplements that would be great. Maintaining your vitamin levels is good for your health, just like maintaining your fluid levels is good for your health. That doesn't mean vitamin D suddenly became a magic bullet of some sort.
GNOME 3.36 "Gresik" released with a 'Do Not Disturb' mode, NVIDIA dGPU launch options
12 Mar 2020 at 12:03 pm UTC
12 Mar 2020 at 12:03 pm UTC
Quoting: lqe5433If you have Intel with AMD dGPU then how do you select your AMD gpu?Seems to work the same way as with Nvidia. You just need to have the switcheroo-control service running and then you can right-click an application from Activities and click "Launch with Dedicated Graphics". All it seemingly does is set the DRI_PRIME environment variable.
Meal making automation in the Zach-like 'Neon Noodles' feels great
11 Mar 2020 at 3:52 pm UTC Likes: 1
11 Mar 2020 at 3:52 pm UTC Likes: 1
I streamed a bit of it and found it was pretty neat and challenging but it's not really programming because there isn't really a logic system to it, you are just putting the instructions in the right order. It is fun to try and make efficient pipelines with multiple bots while keeping things in sync, but I think if you want a programming game Human Resource Machine and the Zachtronics programming games (TIS-100, Shenzen I/O, EXAPUNKS) are a better option.
Intel chipsets have another security issue, this time it's 'unfixable'
6 Mar 2020 at 4:01 pm UTC Likes: 3
6 Mar 2020 at 4:01 pm UTC Likes: 3
Quoting: BielFPsThis somehow makes me a little happy to still be using an old Athlon II X3 (which "transform" into a Phenon II X4 after using Asus Core Unlocker)It won't and it can't, since the flaw is in the boot ROM. The problem cannot be mitigated from the outside, therefore mitigations cannot cause performance loss. Secondly, it's a flaw in the CSME so it's unlikely the vulnerable code and a possible mitigation would be relevant to a hot code path that would cause a performance regression.
I wonder if this will result in another performance hit for linux users.
Intel chipsets have another security issue, this time it's 'unfixable'
6 Mar 2020 at 2:04 pm UTC Likes: 7
The AMD PSP has been revealed to have had security vulnerabilities though, although apparently those were mitigated via firmware updates rather than requiring silicon changes. It would still be nice if we didn't have these co-processors on our CPUs when we don't even use them for anything in consumer computing.
6 Mar 2020 at 2:04 pm UTC Likes: 7
Quoting: rkfgWhy do you think AMD is more secure? Sure, their CPUs/chipsets don't have these exact Intel technologies but they have other things that might be vulnerable. Also, many of those CPU data leaks were not Intel-specific.Absence of evidence is naturally not evidence of absence but I think it's still worth considering that with the amount of negative press towards Intel due to the vulnerabilities discovered in their products, Intel would be motivated to throw money at security research into AMD CPUs to alleviate the PR pressure on them. The fact that results of such research have revealed relatively few vulnerabilities would suggest that either Intel isn't paying them enough or the architecture is more sound when it comes to modern side-channel attacks.
The AMD PSP has been revealed to have had security vulnerabilities though, although apparently those were mitigated via firmware updates rather than requiring silicon changes. It would still be nice if we didn't have these co-processors on our CPUs when we don't even use them for anything in consumer computing.
Valve making steps to address toxic behaviour on Counter-Strike: Global Offensive
7 Feb 2020 at 11:50 am UTC Likes: 1
7 Feb 2020 at 11:50 am UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: fagnerlnA little off topic, I was talking with someone about Proton and how intrusive anti cheats blocks it, and I was thinking about why there's no anti cheat based on AI.To a degree an AI could be used to detect these sorts of things and such AI approaches have already been used in the past. Hell, who knows, maybe you doing overwatches is already training an AI model behind the scenes? But AI isn't a silver bullet, despite how much some marketing teams in tech may want you to believe it is. Particularly in terms of toxic language, AI will have serious trouble deriving context to make determinations on what is and isn't toxic. It'll either let toxic stuff pass or you end up with a Scunthorpe problem. You can ask YouTubers what they think of Google's monetization AI and how well it works (or rather, how poorly it does). Some problems are just best dealt with by humans.
On CSGO I do some "overwatchs" and there's a lot of obvious cheaters, with wallhacks, aim, speed hacks, etc, really easy to catch, so an IA can do the job. Looks like it's really easy to bypass VAC, but I think that it's a lot harder to bypass a AI.
Maybe an IA can detect a toxic player too
The Linux GOTY Award 2019 is now open for voting
2 Feb 2020 at 11:35 am UTC Likes: 5
Snark aside, the game selections this year are not bad. Yes they are indie, but at least to me this indie stuff is more interesting anyway because indie games feel like they at least have some soul. Not to mention games like DUSK, Slay the Spire and Dicey Dungeons play awesomely well, have really good soundtracks and are simply fun.
I would recommend looking beyond the mass-marketed AAA stuff and consider widening your palette to slightly more exotic options. Who knows, you might find something that you would actually like.
2 Feb 2020 at 11:35 am UTC Likes: 5
Quoting: BeamboomOh dear me, that was a load of obscurities as far as I'm concerned. So much so that I can't even vote - I've not even heard of the vast majority here.Don't think that's the first GOTY award article where you've made this comment. Also, there exists a website where you could have heard of these games but I don't remember exactly what that site was...
Not the fault of anyone of us course, but a rather depressing picture of Linux gaming anno 2019.
I thank the gaming gods for Steam Play... When maybe I should curse it?
Snark aside, the game selections this year are not bad. Yes they are indie, but at least to me this indie stuff is more interesting anyway because indie games feel like they at least have some soul. Not to mention games like DUSK, Slay the Spire and Dicey Dungeons play awesomely well, have really good soundtracks and are simply fun.
I would recommend looking beyond the mass-marketed AAA stuff and consider widening your palette to slightly more exotic options. Who knows, you might find something that you would actually like.
Psyonix are ending support for Rocket League on both Linux and macOS (updated)
23 Jan 2020 at 7:26 pm UTC Likes: 15
23 Jan 2020 at 7:26 pm UTC Likes: 15
It's a good opportunity for someone to create an open source replacement for it.
Valve give a little more info on what 'Gamescope' actually does for Linux gaming
16 Jan 2020 at 5:14 pm UTC Likes: 1
16 Jan 2020 at 5:14 pm UTC Likes: 1
Quoting: lejimsterAm I understanding that correctly? Can it run alongside a Gnomes mutter compositor, so that regular gnome desktop users can reap the benefits too?You can run nested Wayland compositors (Wayland compositor on top of a Wayland compositor) so yeah, probably to a degree. I'm not sure if the frame display will then be dependent upon the parent compositor, so I'm not entirely sure if your frame latencies are actually improved.
- Valve reveal all the Steam events scheduled for 2026
- Valve's documentation highlights the different ways standalone games run on Steam Frame
- Survive an elevator trying to eat you in co-op horror KLETKA when it releases February 19
- Even more AMD ray tracing performance improvements heading to Mesa on Linux
- Linux Mint 22.3 "Zena" is out now and supported until 2029
- > See more over 30 days here
- Will you buy the new Steam Frame?
- eev - One-time logout
- Liam Dawe - Away later this week...
- Liam Dawe - Weekend Players' Club 2026-01-16
- grigi - Venting about open source security.
- LoudTechie - See more posts
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