![](/static/253f0d9/assets/icons/icon-96x96.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/q98XK4sKtw.png)
I generally would for desktop use, and absolutely wouldn’t rexommend them for a new user.
Migrated from https://lemmy.one/u/priapus
I generally would for desktop use, and absolutely wouldn’t rexommend them for a new user.
They’re not just giving these AI companies your data…
It’s an optional feature, and you would choose which model you use. If you choose not to use it, or disable the feature, nobody will recieve your data. If you want a browser without these features, Librewolf will likely be a safe choice, as I don’t seem them adding this.
I hope they add DuckDuckGo as a provider. I use their chat with Mixtral often.
Agreed, flatpaks are great for desktop apps. I use Nix for the majority of my packages, but I use flatpak for proprietary for the sandboxing.
What does uBlue switching away from it have to do with someone wanting to install it on Silverblue?
Nix is useful for CLI packages, which aren’t very simple to use through flatpak. It also has far more packages, and is very useful for creating development environments.
They already have, and they offer optional ones that take more force to move.
I see, I only use distrobox for building software that doesn’t easily run on NixOS, so that likely shouldn’t matter too much for me.
I have never heard of toolbx before, can anyone share how it compares to Distrobox? I’ve been using that for some time.
A Solo Leveling game recently released on mobile and it has very reasonable microtransactions from what I’ve seen. This could be similar.
That does make sense. I’ve mainly used gyro on PC, where Steam Input lets you change the sensitivity per game.
I mostly play on a Steam Deck, which lets you use it on most games by emulating a mouse. I played through GTA5 and some other shooters with it. On switch, the others I know of are Splatoon 2 and Overwatch 2 (I think)
IMO it is definitely very superior. If you practice enough you can get pretty close to the precision and speed of a mouse for small movements.
I believe they work on the main console interface, but the majority of games don’t implement support, especially FPS games due to the advantage they offer.
You already can’t use those on these systems though
It already doesn’t have PC crossplay, why not just disable console crossplay, or use the same input based matchmaking other games use, with gyro as an added input? Disabling a superior input is incredibly stupid and will lower the skill ceiling of the game, which is already going to be lower than on PC.
Bottles should make it really simple. You might run into the occasional problem with the installers, but they usually have workarounds.
Looks like it allows that using ollama
Edit: according a couple issues, the flag that allows this is being ignored…
I always check reviews for things like BT adapters to see if people mention it working OTB on Linux. Usually if the manufacturer says compatible with Linux it’ll work right away, but some want drivers installed.
Tauri is the electron alternative we already have. This does look like a good framework, just not the same as electron.