I use SyncThing for syncing things, and LocalSend for just sending things.
I use SyncThing for syncing things, and LocalSend for just sending things.
I think some of them also made Hellgate: London before that.
I would. I’ve tried many MH-like games. God Eater, Wild Hearts, Toukiden etc, and find them all enjoyable.
Monster Hunter.
I’m extremely picky, and I’m lucky to have a game I love to bits that’s been consistent the last two decades. I don’t think it’s a bad thing, and I’ve come to accept it. I still play games socially with my friends, even if I wouldn’t have played that game by myself.
I went through the same thing you did, trying games that are popular and finding that I don’t enjoy them that much, and then thinking that I’ve become jaded and no longer enjoy games. However when I do play a game I enjoy I enjoy it very much indeed, so perhaps I’m not jaded after all.
There’s no accounting for taste.
Have you tried Teardown? Is that accurate enough?
Doesn’t seem unreasonable, I wouldn’t want to associate myself with misbehaviour either.
Now I have even more reason to ignore the game by a gigantic corporation.
I see, man cat
You’ll need PowerTools for Decky: https://git.ngni.us/NG-SD-Plugins/PowerTools
Passthrough input, or charge limiting? Charge limiting was added after release but that was a while ago.
The deck has passthrough input and you can set a charge limit of 50% if it’s docked most of the time to reduce battery wear.
I use a bluetooth keyboard for this, solves it quite handily.
We can start with larger, much more influential social media platforms. How about Twitter?
Monster Hunter
The same Sony that put some software on CDs that would install itself, could not be removed, and was invisible to the end-user? Oh yeah, very secure.
What’s wrong with clean money, eh?
There’s a distinct lack of specifics in the article, and I wonder if that’s because Netflix know something the rest of the game industry doesn’t and aren’t letting on, or if they don’t.
Yes, an IoT device would certainly be a huge headache if it was on a proprietary protocol, I’d avoid them if possible. Thankfully, they haven’t made something absolutely indispensable yet.
The umbrella term for the software used for East Asian Language input is “Input Method Editor.” IMEs exist for languages besides CJK also, such as for Vietnamese. Wikipedia article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Input_method