Fuck it, give the students maps
Give the teacher maps
Everyone gets a map!
Fuck it, give the students maps
Give the teacher maps
Everyone gets a map!
I've used phind a few times and it's pretty good. I'm not sure if it's open source, though
I know I'm a downer sometimes, but those
"Roll to shake hands with the captain of the guard. [Nat 1] You slap him in the face. You're all arrested"
annoy me to no end. The point of rolling is to simulate the possibility of failure for difficult tasks, not for everything you ever do
Not a whole lot of experience distro-hopping here (went from Ubuntu to Endeavour and haven't really changed since) but from what I know it seems like most distros have their place. Arch is highly customisable and all rolling release distros are good for gamers and those who need the latest software. Debian, Ubuntu, Mint, and other LTS distros are good for servers and newcomers (fewer big updates and therefore fewer potential crises)
For the sake of answering the question, I'd say Ubuntu is my least favourite. Its pretty bloated, and then there's the whole snap fiasco
This is why I miss the pre-cantrip days.
Wizard: Oh, I'm out of spell slots. Good thing I dipped a level in Fighter so I can still smash some heads together
US military is already larger than the 4 next largest militaries worldwide IIRC, so no need to worry about being a paper tiger
McConnell literally looks like a zombie. Wish he would just keel over and save everyone from this ongoing headache
Arcology = a word I only learned recently from Stellaris
Do you use a service for the relays, or is it possible to self-host?
I have no mouth and I must scream
Not an expert, but to me it sounds like the issue is that "on demand" uses the iGPU for regular desktop parts and calls for the dGPU when you switch to something requiring more horsepower
The problem with this might be that the execution of this is slow and there's a few seconds between the iGPU switching off and the dGPU switching on
Haven't played Gostwire Tokyo, so I'm not sure exactly how it plays, but you might also enjoy the Witcher 3 and Middle-Earth Shadow of Mordor/War. They both have good combat systems and skill trees (although they work quite differently), as well as an open explorable world. I've played Shadow of Mordor (Steam version), so I know that works fine on Linux