I’ve found LocalSend really nice for this purpose. If you need to send stuff over your wifi to other devices but not sync it in the background it’s really nice
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OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Valve: HDMI Forum Continues to Block HDMI 2.1 for LinuxEnglish
4·5 days agoThunderbolt is exactly that.
Thunderbolt 2 and Mini Displayport used to have the same connector. Since Thunderbolt 3, it now uses the USB C connector.
Thunderbolt 5 supports Displayport 2.1. I wish more devices used Thunderbolt compatible USB C ports. Or GPUs came with a Thunderbolt port on them. They’re pretty awesome, it’s like better USB C.
It seems like only laptops really use them to allow docking through a single cable
I’m not sure you really need an anti virus with Bazzite? Because it is immutable and has rolling releases it’s generally pretty up to date and secure
If you were running a more traditional distro it might be more of a requirement
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Steam Hardware [new Steam Controller, Steam Machine, and VR headset Steam Frame, coming in 2026]English
281·1 month agoHmm this makes me wonder if the Steam Deck 2 will be ARM. If the Steam Frame works well, that could be a way for Valve to push more performance/battery life out of the deck
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I keep waffling on Proxmox. Sell me. For or against.English
26·1 month agoThis. Even if you were going to run a bare metal server it’s almost always nicer to install Proxmox and just have a single VM
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•Linus Torvalds Vents Over "Completely Crazy Rust Format Checking"
16·2 months agoI like that rust is opinionated by default. It reminds me of prettier. I don’t have to argue with teams about what code style were using. I can open up any rust project and know it’s readable and formatted with the same specification as any other rust project
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Opensource@programming.dev•The Open Printer Is a Raspberry Pi Zero W-Powered, Fully-Open, Highly-Flexible Inkjet Printer
5·3 months agoThat’s a really good idea. Something like OpenWrt but for printers would be amazing.
It’s funny, they have their own hardware now. Maybe starting with a open source printer firmware would eventually lead to open source printer hardware.
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Opensource@programming.dev•The Open Printer Is a Raspberry Pi Zero W-Powered, Fully-Open, Highly-Flexible Inkjet Printer
55·3 months agoI’ve always thought it was interesting we have open source 3D printers but with how often 2D printers break and how expensive ink is no one has made an open source 2D printer. It’s nice to see some progress in this field
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Those who are hosting on bare metal: What is stopping you from using Containers or VM's? What are you self hosting?English
2·3 months agoThis reminds me of a question I saw a couple years ago. It was basically why would you stick with bare metal over running Proxmox with a single VM.
It kinda stuck with me and since then I’ve reimaged some of my bare metal servers with exactly that. It just makes backup and restore/snapshots so much easier. It’s also really convenient to have a web interface to manage the computer
Probably doesn’t work for everyone but it works for me
Ubuntu 12.04. I really tried to use it as a daily but wine wasn’t as good back then, a lot of apps I wanted to run were also platform specific. If a package wasn’t in your distros repo you had to try and build it from source which was really difficult for someone just trying to start with Linux. I tried again with Ubuntu 16.04 and it was better but still wasn’t quite there.
Fast forward to now and I’m actually dailying Bazzite 42. I’m not sure if wine has just improved a ton or proton has helped out a lot but windows compatibility has improved so much in the last decade. As much as everyone hates Electron for being heavier than native apps I would prefer an Electron app over no Linux version. Actually a lot of the apps I want to run now ship Linux versions so I don’t even need wine for most things.
Flatpaks and appimages with Gear Lever have made installing apps on Linux as easy as Windows and MacOS. It might not seem like it but it’s come a long way
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Minecraft@lemmy.world•We’re Suing Minecraft in a Class Action LawsuitEnglish
1·4 months agoNot that it makes a difference, but was his mod for bedrock or java?
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•GitHub is no longer independent at Microsoft after CEO resignationEnglish
11·4 months agoI’m running a self hosted Gitlab instance right now but thinking of switching to Forgejo. Anyone tried both and have thoughts on each?
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
3DPrinting@lemmy.world•Slicer software for a Linux system?English
1·4 months agoHmm I’m using it on Bazzite with KDE, which is based off Fedora 42 atomic. I haven’t really noticed any issues with it, though I haven’t printed anything in awhile
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
3DPrinting@lemmy.world•Slicer software for a Linux system?English
20·4 months agoI use PrusaSlicer from Flathub. I was using PrusaSlicer on Windows before switching to Linux. I’ve been using it since the original Slic3r stopped getting updates. Because it’s available as a flatpak it should work on pretty much any distro and immutable distros
As someone unfamiliar with Incus is this kinda similar to Proxmox? I would love an immutable version of Proxmox. This seems pretty cool
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Helldivers 2@lemmy.ca•I finally found the fanmade cinematic that went viral during the Sony PSN controversyEnglish
10·5 months agoI hate kernel level anti cheat but I give them a pass because at least they support Linux and on Linux the anti cheat isn’t kernel level.
Still would prefer they just don’t use kernel level anti cheat on all platforms
Bazzite has a KDE version too. I think it is more popular then the GNOME version of bazzite actually. At least according to the results of the latest steam survey
Pinball Deluxe Reloaded
It’s a fun little time waster, I like that I don’t have any ads on it either
OnfireNFS@lemmy.worldto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Hey Lemmy, what browser do you use and why?
5·7 months agoI switched to Firefox from Chrome back when they were branding it as Firefox Quantum and honestly I have been happy with it. It has been just as fast as Chrome if not faster, it might use more memory but unused memory means your computer could be caching more.
I don’t love the stuff Mozilla has been doing recently but it’s not enough to make me switch. I think the brand redesign in 2024 was pretty horrible, moz://a was genius design compared to the P thing they have now. I think they have also been chasing AI stuff recently. Mozilla has done some pretty cool things in the past though like Rust, Servo and Fluent.


Work: RustRover on MacOS Personal: RustRover on Bazzite
Mainly language support plugins: Python, .env, mermaid