What is it actively doing now with AI? There is the ai sidebar, but if you don't use that it isn't used, right?
tea
It will be whatever the remnants of society deem valuable and convenient to use for condensed wealth. Probably bottle caps.
Unrelated, anyone else looking forward to fallout season 2?
You don't need an account for that, really. I haven't logged into Reddit since the API enshitification wave.
Why are they removing hacking videos? Have they always done that? IT help videos are the cornerstone of why YouTube has any redeeming value these days. I know, I know, I shouldn't use it, but sometimes it is the only place that has the info you need.
Yes, I'm a technical person, but not a web developer and so this was all new to me until very recently. Good luck!
The way I think of the cloudflare tunnel is very similar to a VPN into your system from outside, but for web application traffic specifically.
Not the guy, but I use a domain I bought from cloudflare with a cloudflare tunnel on my network. Not as secure as a VPN like tailscale, but doesn't require setting up a VPN for my friends and family's TVs so they can connect to the server while keeping my actual IP hidden and without needing to do any port forwarding.
I think Linux has also improved immensely. There are so many more things available that weren't an option even a few years ago. Not to say it was bad, but it wasn't something most people could seemlessly do. Now it kinda is.
I'm on Fedora KDE. I think it was drivers. I had the official drivers just fine, but at the time (18-24 months ago?) they were shitty and breaking some games on my GPU so I switched to alternate drivers. I think the drivers are better now, but I haven't switched back and cleaned out my repo list.
Yep, this is the way. Pretty much every game works fine unless there is specific anticheat or some launcher nonsense.
Samsies. Steam Deck showed me it was possible. Made the switch a little after that (waited for Hell Let Loose to turn on EAC for Linux).
This is why I have used flatpak steam. It's a lot easier to manage drivers in it vs the shitshow that is doing it natively with adding custom driver specific repos and whatnot.
Hoping the new PC I just ordered (with an AMD GPU) will be better with the native app.
Yeah, it sucks though. It feels like building a PC has been inadvisable more often than not. Thanks to the GPU prices being ridiculous a while back. Now this. It's crazy that you have to time building a PC between these stupid waves.