Nanabaz2

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 months ago

I wait for Bottles to have it but yea)

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Would love to but damn. Last time I check the price of an 13-in eink, it was datsun something and it was $800. And it is just HDMI anyway.

For other eink device, I would wish for mainline support of the SoC first before anything else. Those non-HDMI e-ink always driven by a crapstatic SoC anyway.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 months ago

Kde Wayland already can do very nicely since 6 a long time ago. Even can change display mode, scaling, without programs to be killed.

I am using laptop 1600p 13.5-in 1.25x and external 1-2x depends on which monitor/TV I plug into.

Not that I use AMD GPU, so if you're on Nvidia, I don't know how far the process has come for wayland and nvidia.

But mix (fractional included) scaling for wayland has been a thing a long long time ago.

And unlike Windows, very not finicky

[–] [email protected] 9 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Try Bottles! Available as flatpak so as long as you don'y have hate for flatpak, Bottles is there. All the normal flatpak benefit + a pretty great UI.

Not sure to WC3 suppose to run, but SC1 I owned on Bnet and I can tell, it works well with just a standard b.net install button in Bottles. SC2, HotS, D2R, D3 and so on I own run just fine, and fast too

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Used it for awhile on and off.

You don't need to use the encrypted sync service. You can have your desktop not sleeping and use the host-clients local sync method to be fully not relying on their external service.

Personally. I was using it with a Debian VM as the always-online host and other machines like phone and laptop, desktop as clients. While also have my own wireguard container running. Pretty much fully offline sync.

I stop using it when I realize they scraped the self-hosted server that they promised.

Also mobile client was ass, just like the promise of self-hosted server.

Ah. I used it for very long time btw. Just stop when I realize the dude scrapped the self-hosted server.

In the mean time. I have been using Notesnook but well, if they fucked up the self-hosted server, I'd leave too

There always markdown + syncthing that I can rely on as for note and to-do

[–] [email protected] 10 points 9 months ago

Maybe not the right answer for you since I am not VPS-based but basement-rack-based.

I would choose Debian + docker for whatever available. Just make sure you have enough space for those. And probably even enough CPU.

To me it makes sense to separate them but some would argue otherwise with Docker/podman/container. Remember, Docker however by default is root.

The one I would actually do at home is Docker on a unpriviledged LXC (Proxmox) to make sure that there is no real root processes running

Cheers

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

According to multiple debian based and ubuntu based and Arch I use. No. Not default. Cubic still is.

My experience was that some days ago I was trying to make my UDP faster, but turned out found out about BBR - for TCP. Well, lucky me - currently some country away from home for family reason. Plex generally takes 40-80s to start a movie/episode for me. And measly about 10s max buffer available - and this is on a 3-5Mbps show.

After BBR (note I have to apply on Proxmox host, my container are unprivileged and can't set this themselves), I got 8-30s max to start a show/movie. And now comfortably sit between some good minutes on buffer. 15-20Mbps quality now playable.

To me personally it was black magic, and I was tossing it in just 2 days ago too

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