• 11 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • English is fucking weird, and I can’t imagine learning all of these rules. Frankly, I couldn’t even explain to you how I know 3/4 of them, it’s just innate at this point.

    Not even knowing shit = not even knowing the least (most worthless) amount possible = knowing nothing?

    All languages are weird. English has very little in the way of inflection, which makes it fairly easy to pick up (in my opinion). For example, it only has one word each for “the” and “a(n)” whereas German has “der/die/das, des/der/des, dem/der/dem, den/die/das, die, der, den, die” and “ein/eine/ein, eines/einer/eines, einem/einer/einem, einen/eine/ein”. Yes, lots of duplicates, but each instance has its own distinct grammatical function, and its much the same with adjectives and nouns, and it all has to line up; “green” is different depending on the grammatical gender and number and noun case of whatever it is that is green… for example.

    I think at some point you’re pretty much done actively learning rules unless you’re a proofreader, teacher, editor, translator, writer, philologist… you ’ll just have to move on to immersing yourself in English, whether it’s in person or via song lyrics, movies, books, forums, articles, documentation, video games. That way you’ll pick up idiomatic expressions like this one and ideally develop something like an informed sense for what sounds right (for example: “I could care less” doesn’t make much sense, and “irregardless” is a pointless double negative).



  • My website-making days also were my graphic-design-school days, so while they could be a little on the weird side I at least tried to make them clean, readable, and aesthetically non-hazardous. Well, apart from that one wonder that wouldn’t look right on Netscape.

    It was great to be able to do this entirely by hand and still end up with something no worse than professional sites in appearance. (And there weren’t yet a bazillion laws and regulations in my country making it too complicated for an undermotivated single private individual to attempt to stay compliant)




  • I dunno. There’s no Proton on Mac, so lumping Mac and Linux together when they really just mean Proton wouldn’t make much sense. There are native Mac and Linux games on Steam, and the Steam store page has icons and system requirement tabs for all three OSes, neither of which happens with Windows-only games. “We’re also releasing Civilization VII for MacOS and Linux / SteamOS” also sounds like they’re talking about actual Linux and Mac builds. It could all be miscommunication, of course. That wouldn’t surprise me.


  • Seems pretty clear to me: “We’re also releasing Civilization VII for MacOS and Linux / SteamOS” doesn’t just not mention Proton, there also isn’t a Proton on MacOS Steam. And you don’t get Linux and Mac system sepcs and platform icons on Windows-only games on Steam whether or not you can run them with Proton; you get ”Steam Deck Verified”.

    (I’m half expecting them to walk that back later but for now the message seems clear.)

















    • Arch Linux

    • Not impose container/sandbox/almost-a-whole-separate-OS-at-that-point packages on you; stay up to date; deliver a fairly vanilla Linux experience that leaves it up to you to “mold”; have most emulators, front-ends, Wine, Steam, launchers, drivers, utilities, bits, bobs, bells and whistles immediately available; be un-branded; not talk about dropping support for 32-bit games (although those are getting rare)

    • Fix dolphin-emu; promote more bits, bobs, bells and whistles out of the not-terribly-reliable AUR (although right now everything I can think of builds or I’m building it “on foot” anyway)

    • Nope, don’t see what for, except I suddenly seem to need xboxdrv again where xpad had been working great all this time (but I’m not sure if that’s Arch’s fault). Maybe if I play around with Bluetooth (again) and I can’t get it to work properly (again) I’ll try a more ready-made Arch-derivative, but probably not on the desktop/gaming PC.


  • monolalia@lemmy.worldMtoLinux Gaming@lemmy.worldDual Boot?
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    2 years ago

    Yes. I think Elder Scrolls Online and Guild Wars 2 were my last “anchors” to Windows (7, at the time). I barely ever booted into it… I wanted to be NOT IN WINDOWS more than I wanted to play big fat luxury games.

    But I did keep it around until there just wasn’t anything left that I wanted to run but couldn’t. The first Humble Indie Bundles with games like FEZ and Limbo had been out by that point as well as a few bigger titles like The Witcher 2. Wine was much more painful than it is now.

    I’ve generally made sure not to buy too “crazy” hardware (like Bluetooth controllers… yes, I’m old and a neophobe and I don’t know what else).