It works and has worked for a while. Application specific sharing for audio is an oddity though, since it can't seem to isolate and you get all desktop audio excluding discord
Flatfire
Because they actually are. There's effectively no rules barring women from competing on regular esports teams, it just never seems to happen. There isn't the same drive or interest, and there isn't enough in the overall culture to support it. This isn't some kind of proposed physical separation, it's intended to drive interest and representation from a competitive standpoint.
It's best practice to keep it separate, and that mostly just has to do with how the different file systems are handled.
Wayland works differently than X11 in this regard. Using Fedora 40 on a Lenovo Yoga 730, I had to enable Tablet Mode from the KDE settings and then auto-rotation worked fine
Surface devices might be different though, so I can't say too much about them. There may be a specific sensor library or tool required, since Wayland communicates with your device differently than X11
I'm all for this. Wayland has its downsides, and X11 has its place, but I appreciate much more that Wayland is built for a desktop experience, and the broad support for different display technologies that KDE has made a priority in Plasma 6 is a large reason for why I made the jump over to Linux full time.
XWayland hasn't caused any significant issues for me either. As far as the experience goes, it's pretty much transparent to the user. For the average person, the biggest difficulty still to solve is probably the XWayland video bridge that doesn't quite work as seamlesly as it should yet.
These Zen-esque chips have come up before, though it sounds like this might be the first time they've been used in a marketed product. A couple other companies born out of the remnants of Centaur also seemed to have borrowed architectural notes from the early Zen CPUs, potentially as a result of their competitors like Hygon making that deal with AMD almost 10 years ago. It's the first time one seems to be almost a boilerplate 1700x though.
This is convenient. I've found that for most software though, especially legacy software, Heroic seems to work more often than not. Not having to configure some of the parameters myself that are required to get DX7 games to scale properly is appreciated.
In 6th grade, my teacher read us the same book mentioned in the Tumblr post. It's called "We all fall down", and it's written by Eric Walters and is a fictional account. At the time, the book had only come out a couple years prior. It's a good book. It's well informed, well written, and it never talked about who was to blame, only the tragedy that occured. The author is also Canadian and he wrote a sequel that covers the aftermath and emotional trauma for survivors and their family members. It's not a book about the attack, it's a book about loss, grief and shock, and about how people can come together to heal from it.
Of course, it sure doesn't sound like this teacher was trying to send that message. I just wanted to shout out a good book.
Yep. Two different platforms with different developers
It's confirmed they don't
I mean, they have done it. When I was looking at phones a few years back, it was genuinely a toss up between a Pixel 4a and an iPhone SE. If all you need it to be is a cameraphone, then both were good options.
Even now, the iPhone 16e is a relatively inexpensive phone when considering its featureset, but I would prefer a "mini" or newer SE variant instead.
I'm using Fedora 43 Plasma under Wayland, with the regular Discord flatpak. Vesktop works, but I recall some oddly hacky things I had to do to make it work