I guess it’s a good thing the Debian releases all have version numbers then.
I guess it’s a good thing the Debian releases all have version numbers then.
I un-licenced the Emily games from my steam library. The writing felt… arrogant? Like, it didn’t matter what you chose you were wrong.
I know what consent is, I don’t need a videogame to do things without mine and then rub it in my face.
It’s good for bragging rights, but a u2955 Celeron Chromebook is better value for money.
I duct taped a RPi4 to the back of a Motorola Lapdock and used custom cables to make the combo into the worst laptop ever. If yours counts, mine does too. This is what the Lapdock looks like:
I’ve got a 500mhz Celeron from the P3 days, it runs OS/2 and has an ISA EPROM burner card in it.
The original Rosetta, which was emulating PPC on x86 is directly comparable to the situation of PS3-game-on-PS4 hardware. I was able to play Halo CE for Mac on x86 with Rosetta and it felt native.
The point is that this isn’t a limitation of technology, this was a decision on Sony’s part.
Xbox One plays a number of 360 games fine.
Apple used QuickTransit for their PPC apps on Intel migration to great success.
I guess Sony just didn’t want to pay the emulator tax?
Yep, probably because it’s not funny or clever. My guess is that you look for funny and/or clever in your jokes.
You can use version numbers, but it’s on you to change them when new point releases drop.
https://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/Debian12.6/