





I’m not providing any argument, I’m just asking.


Well sure, software gets forked and continued all the time, but there’s quite a stark difference between just using open source software or actively maintain it. Not everyone is a software developer, so I still don’t see why “just fork it” is the answer. Those who have the capabilities probably already thought of it no?


I hear this argument a lot about many things but how is “just fork it” the answer? It’s not like just anyone can fork any project and continue developing it. The alternative would be forking it and consider it final version or what?


Let Chatgpt read it for you


Honey, I impregnated the vids


Ahhh look it has windows!!


I understand porting costs money but they kept selling old games for new game prices.


“AI’m here to help us do it again”
Any excess profit due to higher game prices will go to shareholders anyway.


IIRC, HDDs have some reserved sectors in case some go bad. But in practice, once you start having faulty sectors it’s usually a sign that the drive is dying and you should replace it ASAP.
I think if you know drive topology you can technically create partitions on platter level, but I don’t really see a reason why you’d do it. If the drive is dying you need to resilver the entire drive’s content to a new disk anyway.


Not necessarily, there are games that you can run directly from the installation folder without having to start Steam.


Playing games it seems.


His point is basically that if you remove every 5th word of a book it’s legal to hoard as it’s compressed.


Are you rich? Otherwise we’ll still be arrested.


Download all existing literature to build a library for preservation and you’re called a pirate. Download all existing literature from aforementioned library to train an LLM and you’re a tech innovator. What a strange world we live in.
Those bezels are thicker than the original Steam Deck even.
With a SAS card in IT mode it will show up in your OS as 4 different drives. You can mix and match them however you like. You aren’t restricted into pairs of 4. In fact one SAS cable can be multiplexed into many more than 4 drives.
You can often flash these raid cards into IT mode to disable raid and so that they just pass through the raw disks. That way you can hook up either SAS or SATA drives and run them with software raid of your choosing, like ZFS. SATA is probably the safer bet since you will be able to use them in a future build without issues, but there’s no issue with SAS.
If you can’t flash this raid card to IT mode you can buy a cheap LSI 92xx card. They are quite common and cheap, and easy to flash to IT mode.