ClamAV is great tool for email servers to integrate with a message transport agent to detect Windows viruses and reject such messages before they reach users mailboxes. (Or pretend it’s accepted but don’t actually deliver) Other than that, I don’t really know if it makes sense… Maybe if binaries run directly or appimages got more common
The problem with anti-cheat won’t get away anytime soon, and at least not until one invents effective server-side detection, or some completely different methods that can work with Linux and probably not anything that is known already
I wish them the best with the hardware, but the marketing and the pitch are just horrible. Even ignoring poor speach skills (combined with being nervous and non-native), this is exactly how I don’t like products to be advertised - a lot of boring numbers and specs, lots of magical marketing words, but nothing meaningful and practical.
Why would I care on how high they clocked that thing while there’s zero information on how games will actually run?
3-4h battery life is a bold promise, but what games and settings? Is that while pushing it to the limit, or is it average in tested games?
Very little being said about software. Cool, Linux 6.7 (so hyped for features of that particular kernel /s), you forgot to mention if it will ship with Mesa 24 and what Wayland protocols will it support. Seriously though, who the heck cares? How about integration with game launchers and store fronts? How would I know what that gamepad UI offers? How would the extended input work? Will it work with Steam Input or there’s an independent utility for controller mapping? If so, how complete comparing to Steam’s one? „We included touchpad” - cool, I noticed even two of them, but how usable they will be is a big unknown here.
120Hz is nice, but what about synchronization? Will the panel (and software) be VRR capable, or will it just vsync?
Is this even a product targeting gamers in general or Linux and tech enthusiasts specifically? Because if the intention was to impress gamers (especially interested in consoles) then it’s just showing how they don’t get that market.
VM is plenty of overhead and your use-case doesn’t really require that. If you want to effectively isolate browsers and for some reason using Firefox profiles isn’t enough (for me that was perfectly fine to have private and job profiles and just launching them with additional parameter specifying which profile like firefox -P work
and I wrapped them in their dedicated .desktop files), learn about containers and Docker or Podman. You’ll get native performance, access to hardware acceleration and a native app window while also having the sandbox functionality. Plus, you’ll learn about containers, which opens a whole world of possibilities
It’s freaking tired of reminding everyone to practice, yet very few people do it regularly
To me, those aren’t real Flatpak issues. Yeah the CLI interface is clunky, but why would I care when the XDG desktop file path is being added automatically and Flatpak is for desktop apps, not for CLI. It only matters when debugging broken application, but at the same time it's not that hard. Overall that also gives us ability to have multiple instances of the same app installed multiple times from different sources.
Flatpak can easily work on anything that has it in its repo and usually the setup is piece of cake. I had much worse time dealing with some AppImages due to its wild guesses about what the host system is, like libfuse version. Desktop integration is really meh imho and I could never figure out how to use it effectively without some lost desktop files here and there I had to clean manually (haven’t tried in a couple of years now, it could be better now).
Wayland support is intentionally broken by AppImage creator/maintainer just to be able to point finger at Wayland ecosystem and say: look - unfixable. Lately the same dude wanted to propose collection of out-of-tree Wayland protocols to make it more like X11, which is horrible idea and no actual Xorg/Wayland dev would have any interest in doing, because it defeats the decade long efforts to change how the graphics stack works.
AppImage maintainers also showed their disappointing attitude when trying to get OBS to use it, assuming everyone will be interested in having that package format published on official projects website, while conforming to all requirements and doing the work of adjusting app to that format. To no surprise, OBS was horribly broken when built that way, and they demanded OBS devs to fix it, not getting how could they possibly not be interested in having app image, while already having well built (I use it myself, it’s great) Flatpak package.
Flatpak does sandboxing with fine tuning abilities (using something like Flatseal or new KDE's built-in KCM) + there is actual verification process at least for new apps on Flathub. I don’t say it’s 100% safe, but compare that to AppImages which is just running randomly downloaded binaries from the web with full filesystem access.
You guys have headphone jack in your phones? I certainly miss headphone jack in a phone
Microsoft hasn’t changed all that much. They don’t see Linux as an OS to run games or MS Office with. It’s not a consumer platform and never will be, it’s more of a server/container maaybe workstation system for a tech-savvy/developer/scientist. Its UI is meant to open terminals and text editors, not movie players or game launchers. Microsoft loves Linux until it leaves the business area and try to sneak into consumer market. There’s nothing stopping them from doing harm to desktop Linux with all their „love” to Linux the modern mainframe system that happens to be industry standard. They can still patent things and do legality tricks (like in HDMI forums), try to put Windows on devices where Linux could be competition (one Linux handheld console = 10 more new Windows handhelds), bind consumers with something only Windows can run (Xbox Gamepass?) etc
The MS distro you're talking about already exists - it is called Azure Linux (recently renamed from CBL-Mariner).
Ekhm, Steam is still 32 bit app with only X11 support. It can’t even figure out UI scaling based pn global scale. It’s generally a mess.
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