You mean on only integrated the other games like agar.io lag as well? I tried with integrated and the RTX3060 both, and it's baggy on both.
Did agar and survev not lag when you used the RTX3060?
You mean on only integrated the other games like agar.io lag as well? I tried with integrated and the RTX3060 both, and it's baggy on both.
Did agar and survev not lag when you used the RTX3060?
I tried all of those, same issue on all of them on Brave, Chromium, and Firefox. I've given up hope for now, maybe with the next laptop.
I've been using Ublock origin for years and I've never seen a message like that
All good on voyager
I had a discussion with someone who was of the belief that anyone that doesn't build their own packages and reads the documentation is a lazy retard that doesn't know what they're installing on their computer.
That was a fun conversation
Even if I trust the flying itself, I don't trust not being detained upon entering the USA. I'm not flying there again anytime soon.
Just be sure to add only the people you want to be there. I've heard some people add others and it's a bit messy
Soon maybe not anymore
Your comparison between "European vs Dutch" and "American vs Irish-American" is fundamentally flawed.
Nationality vs ancestry are different concepts. Dutch is my current nationality, defined by citizenship, language, culture, and shared social experience. Being "Dutch-Norwegian" would mean I hold dual citizenship or were raised in both cultural contexts simultaneously. Most Americans claiming to be "Irish-American" have no citizenship, language fluency, or authentic cultural immersion in Ireland.
The cultural disconnect is stark. What Americans call "Italian-American culture" has diverged dramatically from actual Italian culture over generations. It's become a distinctly American phenomenon with superficial cultural markers rather than authentic representation. When Irish-Americans visit Ireland, locals often view them as simply American tourists because the cultural gap is so evident.
With each generation, the cultural connection weakens substantially. By the third or fourth generation, what remains is often reduced to stereotypical elements like celebrating St. Patrick's Day or eating pasta on Sundays. This selective cultural picking isn't equivalent to genuine cultural identity.
European identity framework differs fundamentally. In Europe, identity is primarily based on where you were born and raised, your language, and your lived experience – not distant ancestry.
Many Americans who claim hyphenated identities have minimal knowledge of their ancestral country's modern culture, politics, or social realities. They cling to outdated or stereotypical notions that no longer reflect the actual country.
Comparing a continental identity (European) to a national one (Dutch) is not the same as comparing a national identity (American) to a hyphenated ancestral one (Irish-American). The Netherlands exists within Europe; "Irish-American" does not represent a legitimate political or cultural subset of America in the same way.
I always find this kind of silly. You were born and raised in the USA, so you're American, whether you like it or not. There's people saying they're Irish American despite 3 generations having passed, so when does it end? Am I Dutch-Norwegian because my great grandmother was Norwegian and came to The Netherlands?
No, I'm Dutch, I was born and raised here without influence of the Norwegian culture.
Interesting, which browser did you use? I remember agar.io also being very laggy. Haven't tried slither, but other browser games were laggy too. I'd need to reinstall Linux since I have since removed it again. I'll let you know when I find something!
In the meantime I'm really curious for anything you find that could help.