they aren’t publicly traded so that’s probably part of the reason.
Game dev and Linux user
they aren’t publicly traded so that’s probably part of the reason.
I’ve seen arch gain a lot of popularity lately, at least in my circles.
The first domino is probable gaben working at microsoft honestly
Steam hasn’t (afaik) revoked access from a game that someone already owns, and DRM on steam is entirely optional, even if you use the steamworks sdk. (source: I am a developer making a game using the steamworks sdk that can run without steam open or installed)
Someone I know misheard “Tenth Avenue Freestyle” as “Tell the devil you freestyle” and honestly that’s a much more interesting song.
Yeah that’s it, thanks
Where’s that iPhone comic about society
MIT license is useful for a lot of stuff that is traditionally monetized. Game development tools, for example. I don’t think a game engine could become very popular if you had to release your game’s source code for free.
There’s also general gatekeeping of their developer tools which restricticts ports of software, and not following standards properly (USBc, sms).
Sounds like people with voting. They love to tell you how it doesn’t matter, and yet republicans put tons of effort into making it more difficult.
Ungoogled chromium with some privacy extensions would probably be a similar experience.
Any reason for picking it over all the other chromium browsers?
Yeah, on my keyboard it’s just an icon so I forgot the actual name lol
Should be the screenshot key
Oh weird, I suppose that makes sense for debian though where the goal is to be stable rather than be up-to-date.
What web browser requires you to add a repo to install it on Linux
Don’t worry, it gets better. The whole thing is a web app.
I think the real thing we need to do to attract windows users is have tuxkart installed by default.