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It works will. I've tried used Sunshine as stream server and Moonlight as client to play games on my Steam Deck, my PC installed openSUSE Tumbleweed with KDE Plasma. There may be some key binding issues, but they can be solved with a little setup.

It's like some kind of meta writing, the writing style is proving what it's talking about.

I believe this is primarily due to the distinct humanistic perspective found in Studio Ghibli animations. For the average anime enthusiast, entertainment value often takes precedence over other factors; however, Ghibli works are regarded as possessing greater intellectual depth and literary quality. Their themes often revolve around childhood innocence, societal shifts, environmental protection, and are replete with metaphors for the real world. This offers ample room for interpretation, allowing the films to resonate with a diverse audience—whether through their imaginative visual storytelling or their unique spiritual essence.

I use uBlock Origin blocked the container element, problem solved.


I'm used to play video games on my Linux PC with KDE Plasma, but because some little glitches, I must use X11 session. Not sure if wayland is stable enough for gaming, as I know SteamOS use X11 session as default.


Native Linux games work just fine under Wayland (KDE). Windows games now work too (under Wine/Proton) but isn't ready for prime time yet (although GloriousEggroll's Proton is in a much better shape though thanks to additional Wayland compatibility patches, but it's still technically beta). In saying that, games running in Wayland using XWayland run. mostly okay, but most performance-conscious folks might want to run them using Valve's gamescope microcompositor which usually delivers better performance and as a bonus, packs some nifty features like better HDR support, resolution spoofing and FSR scaling, which means you can upscale games on low-end PCs, or supersample older low-res games on modern PCs.


I've built a self-hosted reddit-like community platform in Go: https://baklab.app

Users can create their own sub-communities, and within them, set up different categories and boards. Posts can be voted on, and board types can include regular posts, Q&A, or live chat. It's like a hybrid of Reddit and Discord but leans more towards a traditional web community. It also supports server-side rendering, making it SEO-friendly. This project is an extension of my previous Hacker News clone, dizkaz (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43885998).


I'm using a QMK split keyboard, remap the Left Space key as Ctrl key so that I can press it with my left thumb finger.


For me, the "modern" way is when I meet any problem on updating my emacs config files, just ask Claude or Gemini, they will help you to find solutions for the most of common problems. The "traditional" way is to know the basic keybindings, and write an actual project directly, whenever you found there's lack of a feature, just search and config for it. After a period, you'll got a stable config for long term use.


I've tried use pnpm to replace npm in my project, it really speed up when install dependencies on host machine, but much slower in the CI containers, even after config the cache volume. Which makes me come back to npm.


I believe it depends on the industry your business is in. In many businesses, technology is only a small component, and other factors such as connections, sales, and marketing can be more important than the technology itself.


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