Can personally confirm that the OnePlus Watch 2 is fully vendor agnostic.
Can personally confirm that the OnePlus Watch 2 is fully vendor agnostic.
Just the kernel module, which still interacts with the proprietary driver.
That app just looks like reskinned KDE Connect.
That might be it- my screen is configured to turn on when tilted up, too. I’ll try that out.
How are you getting multiple weeks? Mine barely lasts a few days.
You’ll be disappointed if you’re looking for “more DOOM 2016”- Eternal is a different beast entirely. Feels much more like a realtime first person puzzle game than a mindless arena shooter. Knowing enemy weak points and what guns do the most damage to that specific enemy + micromanaging ammo, health and armor is a BIG part of Eternal’s gameplay loop. It’s very good, but it’s quite far removed from 2016 in terms of gameplay.
Not particularly, the workflow on your Arch system will be the same as any other distro, that’s the nice thing about Distrobox.
I would highly recommend looking into the distrobox-assemble
command, though: it lets you declaratively build distroboxes with the packages and config you need on them. I have a personal box which operates as my primary terminal that’s automatically destroyed and recreated on every boot. This way, the packages I always use in a terminal are available, and I can add something I need temporarily with no issue without worrying about forgetting about that package being there down the line and causing some weird update failure or general bloat.
It does take some adjusting- the pitfalls you’d encounter with Distrobox on Universal Blue are the same as Distrobox on any other distro, so first I’d say to try moving your workflow to Flatpak and Distrobox on your current system or a VM and see how it works out. Generally Flatpak is preferred to a rootless Distrobox which is preferred to a rootful one, but sometimes there’s not a Flatpak for something (especially command line tools) and you need access to hardware or system level stuff that only a rootful one can do properly.
That’s because of a difference on protocol (iMessage vs SMS). This wouldn’t matter if they chose to support RCS which is effectively the Android iMessage equivalent and is an open standard (on paper, not necessarily in practice) but that will never happen.
I think there’s still value in it from being a DE-agnostic GUI solution, for what it’s worth.
I can agree with this, my Darter has horrendous battery life and had a ton of bugs that made the thing really annoying to use until a recent BIOS update. I can’t help but feel like I got burned.
Next laptop is a Framework for sure.
Are we sure this isn’t just for clarity? “Language model” implies Bard and such already as they’re more formally called “large language models.” While I don’t like that they’re doing it, I think it’s very likely they’ve been publicly scraping information for quite some time (in fact, for an LLM like Bard, they pretty much have to!), and have just changed the wording to fully disambiguate between Google Translate and Bard.
It’s honestly gotten to a point where I don’t even check ProtonDB anymore unless it’s a brand new game. Generally things just work.
Look into the app Repainter. It isn’t free and needs root or Shizuku access but does the trick.
Fully agreed- I experimented with it around November of last year and absolutely love the idea of it, but the documentation just isn’t there. At the time I found nothing explaining flakes in a clear and concise manner so I had no idea how to use them or add them into my configs. People online kept saying to port the rest of my configuration to flakes but all of the examples online were complex and there was no simple example to build off of. I ended up settling for Universal Blue since it just uses OCI containers and I don’t need a PhD to have a pseudo-declarative environment in it, but would love to revisit NixOS if the documentation ever gets better.
This is still fully possible on Immutable distros (which is why the name is misleading, but unfortunately is what stuck- “image-based” is a better description) and uBlue has a mechanism for it- since they’re delivered using OCI containers, it’s trivial to fork or derive from the project and add, remove or tweak whatever you need. There’s also BlueBuild which is YAML but that’s a third party project.