Great to know, I have only run Raspberry Pi OS so far. But I think we also need parity in applications since a lot of packages are architecture specific. I’m sure most core packages and application packages in Linux must be supporting ARM.
Great to know, I have only run Raspberry Pi OS so far. But I think we also need parity in applications since a lot of packages are architecture specific. I’m sure most core packages and application packages in Linux must be supporting ARM.
Wow, they haven’t fucked up for more than a year? Is this some kind of record?
Don’t care what Windows does. What’s going on on Linux here.
Looks like something cooked up by /g/
Nice. I haven’t used Windows as my main OS for several years now. I do boot into Windows once in a while to to test some things, but Linux has been my main driver for everything from gaming to productivity and I haven’t looked back.
OpenJDK has Project Wakefield going on to address Wayland support for Java applications.
Dyslexics be like
You can now write pom.xml in other languages as well if you want: https://github.com/takari/polyglot-maven/
This is a major change, so I think this will probably be in Proton 9.0, whenever Valve releases that.
This is some /r/surrealmemes shit right here.
Terminal only. Though in theory you should be able to expose a port to access an X or Wayland session remotely to use a GUI, but I haven’t tried this.
Hardware raytracing works even on newer Radeon cards. I played Control recently with raytracing on Linux and it works pretty well, though the average frame rate drops to around 40 FPS. I had to use FSR to get higher framerates.
HDR support is expected to come with Plasma 6.
HP released the Dev One laptop running Linux once.
From the link you shared:
Most of Jetbrain’s tools have community editions as well.
Kotlin user spotted