It works, but it only works on Linux so they don’t advertise it. You may need to update the firmware to get the best experience too.
It works, but it only works on Linux so they don’t advertise it. You may need to update the firmware to get the best experience too.
DP to HDMI adapter that supports VRR or FreeSync.
Here you go: https://www.amazon.com/Cable-Matters-102101-BLK-Computer-Adapter/dp/B08XFSLWQF
It’s slightly quirky, but it does work. Although I don’t use HDMI audio so maybe you’re already using the same adapter.
0.82 is only two weeks old, so you would have needed nightly up until that point for most newer Garmin devices. I did uninstall Connect shortly after but I think you just have to make sure it’s not running, as I know some use both apps.
Gadget bridge doesn’t really work for any “new” (i might be wrong here) devices.
Most newer Garmin devices should work since 0.82 (and earlier with nightly). It’s not feature complete compared to using Gadget Connect but should be enough for most use cases, unless you really care about the social/awards aspect and some of the deeper metrics (although if you’re handy with SQL you can handle that yourself).
Not being able to set an event date and have “daily suggested workouts” follow that is my only annoyance, although I’ve been happy just using the defaults for now.
They are planning to use KVM under the hood in the future. But who cares when we have qemu and libvirt.
If you can convince the lowest white man he’s better than the best colored man, he won’t notice you’re picking his pocket. Hell, give him somebody to look down on, and he’ll empty his pockets for you.
The irony being that healthy teeth don’t look anywhere near that white.
This is good for america because reasons.
People with lifted pickup trucks can now go into even more debt, so they can flex on the “poors” (while complaining about their “economic anxiety”).
You can actually play from the UI too, but it’s not particularly nice to use (or intended to be used that way).
Another issue is that zwave isn’t available in all countries (or it is but uses incompatible frequencies) so it’s less useful outside the big markets.
I’ll add pinchflat as an alternative with the same aim.
That’s the point of this standard, at least in theory. Same with the older but still common ZigBee standard.
This community is going to have ample content for the next four years (and hopefully only four years). Even if this story itself is likely bullshit.
Perplexica is one example. I also seem to remember there is some way to integrate it with SearxNG which is a self hosted meta search engine.
I’m going to have to try the selfhosted variants now. What a huge piece of shit.
This exactly, as long as your phone has at least one frequency band of the provider, then it will at least connect to their network and allow you to access data.
In the implementation in Australia, you actually will lose data access too if you’re blocked (wifi still works of course). That strikes me as kind of dumb, but I guess they don’t want to give the impression that it’s supported at all, since the whole thing is about emergency calling access.
It’s not just the bands. You could have all of the needed bands and still be blocked (and you could me missing one and just get a warning).
I don’t know about the 2 VMs part (although that should work) but they have a Youtube channel with a couple of videos, including Resident Evil Village.
Possibly you are CPU bottlenecked in those particular games, in which case FSR would do nothing.
Raw milk (and bird flu) for all!