Linux users to Windows users with a question: "you can solve that by switching to Linux"
Linux users to that same user when they switch to Linux and have a question: "why the fuck do you wanna do that? Go back to Windows."
Linux users to Windows users with a question: "you can solve that by switching to Linux"
Linux users to that same user when they switch to Linux and have a question: "why the fuck do you wanna do that? Go back to Windows."
Just keep in mind that there are some very different options within the Linux world and different people here will push you towards different options. The two most common and most different options are Bazzite and Mint.
While both of them can definitely work well, in my experience Mint still leaves a lot of new users unsatisfied with it. I'm yet to see any windows user complain about Bazzite, so that's my recommendation.
Either way if you try one and it doesn't live up to your expectations, there's still a chance the other might.
I'll trust you and pick it up.
If the word "skeptic" in the title actually meant that, this would be a good thing. It's good to be skeptic about everything until you're shown evidence. The problem here is that those folks aren't really skeptic.
I would do 720 + 3 * 70 + 3 * 2
And they did hold back that day, after the first 4 goals +/-, just to avoid embarrassing the host that much further.
Is that how it is these days? If I log with my Microsoft account on a Windows device, the username used is only part of my first name. It always annoyed be that it was cut in a very unnatural way and I had no way to change it. I searched for some way to fix it and what I found said it was auto generated way back in the first time I used it on a windows pc and that it was saved in my account in some attribute that nothing ever updates.
I don't know about high refresh rates, but multiple 4k screens was a pain point in 2023 and it's a complete non-issue in 2025.
Call of duty is a Microsoft game now.
I actually pay extra to my internet provider for a fixed ip so that I may have a privilege of being permabanned
I do like the work Microsoft has done with typescript itself, but more and more I'm seeing they are trying to tie up the language to VSCode, treating other editors as "second class citizens" for it and that has started to make me reconsider things.
Coming back after a week to share what I thought of it:
I loved the app itself and all the different ways to input values
the different game modes are quite creative
all the extra restrictions added by the different game modes make the puzzles a bit too easy for my taste
miracle mode is fun until you get a few numbers in, but then it becomes quite straight forward again.
all of the puzzles (at least as far as I played) follow the same pattern and when you notice it you can skip the whole sudoku part and answer it just by pattern recognition.