During my research into portability, I kept thinking about how frictionless it is to play classic console games today. Pulling on that thread led me to projects designed explicitly for virtual machines, such as Another World which is equally easy to play today due to its targeting of a portable virtual machine, instead of any ever-changing physical hardware.
afaik correct me if im wrong but rust desk is not really the right tool for that. Rustdesk connects devices by connecting all the way through the internet to the rustdesk servers and then to the other device.
VNC or RDP are the right approaches here, cause you can use them to connect through the local network, never leaving your LAN/intranet. In addition to not needing a connection to the internet it should be more reliable that way.
If you use KDE then I think their krdc gui is pretty good. Otherwise Remmina.
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Nothing ever pulls off from an outer perimeter, it’s only inner perimeters of empty loops or holes.
Isn't that obvious?
Try making a circle of a certain size on a flat, empty table, by dragging a string. The circle will become smaller, than the target size because of the part that is already laid down will be dragged inwards.
Now drag the string around a gluestick, it can't be smaller than the gluestick's circle because the gluestick is in the way.
Any linux distro is significantly more lightweight than windows. But I'd say that there is not much difference between arch and for example the most bloated distro: ubuntu.
If you are a coder, the CLI will be easy. Most of the time the use of CLI is comparable to a single line in your code where you call a function with some parameters.
If you have time, interest and discipline to read the documentation and learn a lot, then arch is great.
If you just want to use a Linux OS, install Mint and just use it. It's no big deal, just a normal OS. It's very intuitive, low friction and no microslop bloat.
For those that don't know what any of that means (like me 5 minutes ago):
Arbitration is an alternative to going to court. Instead of suing each other in front of a judge, both parties agree to have a neutral third party (an arbitrator) settle disputes privately. It's usually faster and cheaper than traditional litigation.
The class action waiver means you give up the right to join with other users in a class action lawsuit against Zed. So if many users had the same grievance, they couldn't band together, each person would have to resolve their dispute individually.
Why tf are they afraid of being sued or class actioned against?
I haven't really used zed much and I'll delete my account and uninstall, just to show them that this sucks.
from: https://wiki.xxiivv.com/site/devlog.html
java was right all along! hail the JVM