What's your proposed solution? Open source can't really fix this - distribution of proprietary games isn't really geared towards FOSS. If all competing products are worse, why would anyone switch? Valve isn't using any underhanded tricks to keep users on Steam, they don't need to. Their competitors actually could catch up, theoretically, valve hasn't pulled up the ladder. It's just a matter of, y'know, making a product nearly as good as Steam, which is a monumental undertaking.
moomoomoo309
I don't really think steam is anti competitive, their product is just so much better than the competition that they've earned a monopoly position. Whenever another company has tried to dethrone steam, it's lacked features or didn't allow refunds or didn't run on Linux or didn't work as well with controllers - valve is just so far ahead on steam, it'd be monumentally difficult to catch up.
Okay, but, did you actually watch the video? It's based on Homestar Runner and how they intentionally mispronounced something - the mispronunciation is entirely intentional.
That is, in fact, how "dogecoin" is pronounced (doj coin). Here's one of the two creators of dogecoin saying as much (and why!): https://youtu.be/kVDcOI0-gdQ
No snapd on mint at all.
Try the auto tab discard extension on Firefox. That'll reduce firefox's memory footprint.
Yeah, the axes on this are weird, why would the opposite of a systems language be a toy language? And why is Lua, a very popular and commonly used language in tons of stuff, a "toy"? And Lua is a nu Lang? It's older than Java, maybe it just feels newer because each release isn't necessarily backwards compatible?
I think you're using this meme template backwards - the car should say most people and the text for the directions should be flipped. The car is supposed to be going somewhere it shouldn't, not somewhere it should.
Honestly, I would have expected C++ to end with the SIGSEGV and nothing else, then for python to reply.
They probably are waiting for the open source driver to be rock-solid, and it's getting there.
SteamOS will have the same issues, Nvidia doesn't like to play nice on Linux.
Yeah, but LLMs still consistently don't follow all rules they're given, they randomly will not follow one or more with no indication they did so, so you can't really fix these issues consistently, just most of the time.
Edit: to put this a little more clearly after a bit more thought: It's not even necessarily a problem that it doesn't always follow rules, it's more so a problem that when it doesn't follow the rules, there's no indication it did so. If it had that, it would actually be fine!