

Try running: killall ibus-daemon before launching and see if that fixes it. I’ve run into this in a couple games.


Try running: killall ibus-daemon before launching and see if that fixes it. I’ve run into this in a couple games.


There is no fundamental performance difference between these “gaming” distros and any other ones. Some minor kernel tweak maybe net a few percentage points here and there, but the gaming stack is still the same across the board, and very little can be done to squeeze more performance there without each just getting performance improvements.
Even still, you’d just install those same versions on any other distro and get those performance benefits.


You said this was on Deck, yeah? Check the Deck in-game controller settings. See what the mapping is supposed to be, versus how it’s behaving. If it was previously working, something with configs changed. Nothing about your launch settings should to be messed with.


Check the bindings in the game and remap it


Wha?
You do realize there are plenty of bare metal infrastructure deployments out in the world, yeah? Being in a container solves no problems in this scenario at all.


I bet the majority of the new adoption traffic is from mobile networks though. Need more wired carriers adopting.


Remember how all these shitty directors were predicting that people wouldn’t care about practical effects anymore after that advent of environmental CG in the 90’s?
People notice. Yes we care.


Blacklists using IPv4 as reference usually expire old addresses after a period of time for this reason. You can also find your IP in any lists and request to be removed if you can contact the maintainer. If you’re using a shared IP for ingress or egress, you’re kind of SOL though. You need to get a dedicated static IP from whomever your host is to help prevent this from happening.


This is a good set. Who is this?


They thought wrong.
This dumbass idea assumes a single person and NOT a group of people are responsible for scalping tickets, when in actuality this will just drive up scalping prices.
You fucking morons.


You need to be on a rolling or upstream adjacent distro that has the most recent and untested version of everything available. Sounds like you would break things though, as you’re unfamiliar with the how/why of package management in general.
Mesa is a base library for much larger systems at work. Your example of Windows just letting install something like this isn’t exactly possible. Seems you think Mesa is like a driver or similar. It is not.


TrendNet is far superior and based on Torrence anyway. Netgear and Linksys are junk anyway. Get yourself an open hardware platform, or something that can run OpenWRT. Skip the corporate manufacturers who all kind of suck.


Can you explain a bit more on how this is a benefit?


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They have a simple bash installer from what I see. You can also install everything via pip as well. Couple quick commands.
That bug report mentions a few versions, so maybe just go back to whatever version was working on your other machine.


This looks like a sandboxing issue. Using the “no-sandbox” flag has never worked on AppImage from what I remember, except for very light runtimes. Running with sudo will throw that error because the root user has no display manager running.
Just try running the installer if you don’t want to mess around with debugging the AppImage. Check the GitHub Issues for related keywords and see if others are running into the same issue, maybe it’s just a specific release, or SELinux causing the problem.


This is for the client display only, and not the iOS API interface as I’m discussing. It’s not very plainly laid out in the docs, but one would assume any queuing of content into the notification system would be stored or cached if not cleared. There doesn’t seem to be a way to have a client of that system to clear it’s own data once it’s in there, just cancel last notification.


Clever. Not much you can do for this except not subscribe your app to the notifications API, or take extra steps to attempt to clear them, but I don’t remember that being an option on iOS. Going to be an interesting fix.


This guy loves Ayn Rand
…then why are you setting Steam Deck launch options? You may want to clarify that.
Same basic premise though. Check your controller confirm for both Proton, and then in the game.