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If you want Proxmox to dynamically allocate resources you’ll need to use LXCs, not VMs. I don’t use VMs at all anymore for this exact reason.
If you want Proxmox to dynamically allocate resources you’ll need to use LXCs, not VMs. I don’t use VMs at all anymore for this exact reason.
This post reminded me yesterday that I hadn’t played the last DLC they released for it so I did the first scenario in it earlier this morning, and it’s still one of the most satisfying games to solve ever. It and Return of the Obra Dinn are seriously in a league of their own.
I don’t use game pass, but I would definitely recommend anyone that does try Neon White and The Case of the Golden Idol. I love both of those games.
I had done a few easier Linux installs on Raspberry Pis and VMs in the past, but when I decided I wanted to try using Linux as my daily driver on my desktop (dual-booted with Windows at the time) I decided to go with a manual Arch install using a guide and I would 100% recommend it if you’re trying to pick up Linux knowledge. It’s really not a difficult process to just follow step-by-step, but I looked up each command as they came up in the guide so I could try to understand what I was doing and why.
I don’t know what packages archinstall includes because I’ve never used it, but really the biggest thing for me learning was booting into a barebones Arch install. Looking into the different options for components and getting everything I needed setup and configured how I wanted was invaluable.
That being said, now that I know how, is that how I would choose to install it? Nah, I use the CachyOS installer now, but if I wanted stock Arch I’d probably use archinstall.
Are you talking about Revengeance? Because Kojima was involved with that game, it just wasn’t developed in-house by his studio, and it’s a very good game.
The shitty Metal Gear game made without Kojima being involved was Metal Gear Survive.
You’re right, nobody can ever know even remotely everything.
Luckily, the same device you used to post that comment can also be used to check if what you are about to say is actually true, so you can prevent yourself from spreading misinformation like this in the future.
I think Wayland is at point now where I’d be comfortable recommending it to beginners. I’m on nvidia and just switched myself in the past month because I felt like it was finally ready.
To me this is actually a good move for Ubuntu’s reputation.
Losing good reputation or losing bad reputation?
Pretty sure they’re talking about generative AI created deepfakes being easier than manually cutting out someone’s face and pasting it on a photo of a naked person, not comparing Adobe’s AI to a different model.
As a communist neo-liberal myself, I think all women in video games and real life should look like straight dogshit.
The only one I can think of is that Source might still have some id code in it from the goldsrc days, but that was before it was open sourced.
The one time I tried playing it the average age of everyone else seemed to be around 10-12, so you might be on to something there.
That I’m not sure of. My proxmox host is headless and none of my containers have a GUI so I haven’t tried.
You can also pass the GPU to multiple LXCs that will share it vs it being tied to a single VM. I use VMs as little as possible in Proxmox these days.
How does Hi-Rez even still exist when they have never made a single decent game?
I remember when they tried releasing Global Agenda with a monthly paid subscription. It was shit and no one played it so they switched to no subscription within a year (here’s when I got suckered into buying it), but it was still shit and no one played it so it went free to play within another year.
How do you exist as a company for this long with that as your foundation?
I’ve never heard of this happening before. What does the TV do?
Visual discomfort because it looks like an slightly older app? What kind of issue is that???
You’ve met an iOS user.
Are you under the impression Microsoft was being paid to find that exploit or something? How is that at all related?
That truly was an independent third-party finding an exploit, and do you know why it was possible? Because the code was open source.
Great point.
Absolutely, if it was anything I needed or even really wanted to be sure was reliably available I’d never put it on a free VPS.
Now, something trivial like this that just requires installing wireguard and nginx, copying over some configs, and changing a DNS record? Hard to beat free.
TF2 didn’t even have microtransactions until 2010, and it both pretty much invented them and let you trade/sell them (albeit for steam bucks), so there are definitely worse games you could be throwing money at.
I bought the Orange Box the day it came out, and when I stopped playing TF2 a decade ago I sold all my items (which I mostly got from buying other games that I would have bought anyway), and I ended up with more steam money than I had ever actually spent on TF2 directly.