A Way Out is an interesting one. Very story driven with some FPS stuff near the end.
I haven't done any research into GPUs on Linux in awhile. I wasn't aware nvidia finally released an open source driver. Looks like it's recommended for the 3080. Seems like this was a fairly recent development so you may have more luck?
I found one of those at a thrift store! I had no idea the top came with a stand. It's become my daily brewer! It makes a great cup!
I have an aeropress for making a smaller amount t of coffee. I have a metal filter that has a special valve that's supposed to make something espresso adjacent. It sort of works.
GTA for the Gameboy on the other hand, kinda rad.
I was really disappointed with this one. I tried it out per a friend's recommendation after they heard I was playing a freeware space flight simulator (Orbiter, which I do actually recommend).
I always just use zsh with oh my zsh. Best of both worlds.
One thing that I still don't know how to do is go to the next result in the search with Ctrl+r. Makes it less useful lol
Glad I didn't have to scroll to see Aphex Twin mentioned. 🙂
Try out Godot. It uses a really simple language (gdscript), has excellent learning material, and you can make games!
Depends if you want a managed service or not. As stated by others, any Linux vm can do it: Aws ec2, Azure, Digital ocean, etc. Cost won't spiral because you pay a fixed fee for the vm you choose (can be like 5 dollars a month).
The options that can spiral if for some reason your app started being used a lot. But likely these will be pretty much free:
A lot of cloud platforms have some sort of managed container service. Wrap your app in a docker container and pay per 10K API calls for example.
Another option is to use a managed service that handles the runtime for you (AWS Lambda, Google cloud app engine, etc.) These options should have the option for a dotnet core runtime. They can also be really cheap if your app isn't used much.
What are the big compromises? I've only been here for a day or two.
variouslegumes
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I hope RSS feeds never die. Antennapod forever.