https://www.rpgsite.net/news/16310-dragons-dogma-2-receives-new-easier-casual-mode-difficulty-available-now-in-its-latest-update
They've finally added a Portcrystal to Bakbattahl.
https://blog.sakugabooru.com/2024/09/04/oshi-no-ko-stage/?
Oshi no Ko S2 has had to navigate tricky waters to be able to animate a stage play with the type of authenticity that the source material didn’t quite venture into. This has reinforced the me…
https://blog.playstation.com/2024/09/10/welcome-playstation-5-pro-the-most-visually-impressive-way-to-play-games-on-playstation/
Features including GPU upgrade, advanced ray tracing, and PlayStation Spectral Super Resolution take players to new heights.
Hi there self-hosted community.
I hope it's not out of line to cross post this type of question, but I thought that people here might also have some unique advice on this topic. I'm not sure if cross posting immediately after the first post is against lemmy-ediquet or not.
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/22291879
I was curious if anyone has any advice on the following:
I have a home server that is always accessed by my main computer for various reasons. I would love to make it so that my locally hosted Gitea could run actions to build local forks of certain applications, and then, on success, trigger Flatpak to build my local fork(s) of certain programs once a month and host those applications (for local use only) on my home server for other computers on my home network to install. I'm thinking mostly like development branches of certain applications, experimental applications, and miscellaneous GUI applications that I've made but infrequently update and want a runnable instance available in case I redo it.
Anybody have any advice or ideas on how to achieve this? Is there a way to make a flatpak repository via a docker image that tries to build certain flatpak repositories on request via a local network? Additionally, if that isn't a known thing, does anyone have any experience hosting flatpak repositories on a local-network server? Or is there a good reason to not do this?
I was curious if anyone has any advice on the following:
I have a home server that is always accessed by my main computer for various reasons. I would love to make it so that my locally hosted Gitea could run actions to build local forks of certain applications, and then, on success, trigger Flatpak to build my local fork(s) of certain programs once a month and host those applications (for local use only) on my home server for other computers on my home network to install. I'm thinking mostly like development branches of certain applications, experimental applications, and miscellaneous GUI applications that I've made but infrequently update and want a runnable instance available in case I redo it.
Anybody have any advice or ideas on how to achieve this? Is there a way to make a flatpak repository via a docker image that tries to build certain flatpak repositories on request via a local network? Additionally, if that isn't a known thing, does anyone have any experience hosting flatpak repositories on a local-network server? Or is there a good reason to not do this?
https://buried-treasure.org/2024/09/slash-jump/
https://www.rpgsite.net/preview/16262-dragon-quest-iii-hd-2d-remakes-revamped-monster-arena-beating-up-robbin-ood-at-skyfell-tower-preview
A brand-new hands-on preview experience and many new screenshots for the highly-anticipated remake of Dragon Quest III.
https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2024-08-30/crunchyroll-states-it-remains-fully-committed-to-dirty-pair-anime-bd-release/.214935
Kickstarter-funded project is in post-production, but delayed, with new updates on project status promised every 2-4 weeks
https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2024-08-29/studio-trigger-teases-transformers-40th-anniversary-promo-video/.214906
Transformers animated series first aired in September 1984
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