welp guess I’m John Fireemblemshitposting now
- 91 Posts
- 36 Comments
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
linuxmemes@lemmy.world•Real hackers roll their own little oneEnglish
11·29 days agoNot all of Linux, but that has kind of already happened. I wish I was making this up.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Sony WF-C510 connected on Linux, but never recognized as a headsetEnglish
4·1 month agoI have a pair of Sony WH-1000XM6s (similar sort of pairing and Bluetooth system although with the addition of LDAC) and I can confirm the Sound Connect app is not required to pair the headphones (works perfectly on my laptop with a Qualcomm Bluetooth chip and my desktop with an Intel chip, both running Fedora). It’s only for settings management and firmware updates through your phone. It might be worth checking if there’s any firmware updates for the headphones, and also try a few more resets. I used to have a pair of Bose headphones that had the exact same problem as you are experiencing, but it would go away after disconnecting and reconnecting a few times. It’s worth also seeing if you can pair with any other type of device in addition to your phone (Windows, smart TV, anything that can do Bluetooth A2DP) as it might be an issue with pairing to devices in general.
Out of curiosity how are you triggering pairing mode? If you are triggering pairing mode through the Sound Connect app, it might be worth instead holding the hardware button on the back of the case for 5 seconds to enter pairing mode.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukOPto
Fire Emblem@lemmy.world•Fire Emblem Shadows, a smart device game introducing a new style of battles featuring role-playing and social deduction, available todayEnglish
3·3 months agoTried it, and I agree. Why did they make a Fire Emblem game with primarily automatic combat? On one of the first missions I literally tapped on the screen once and the rest of the fight was just automated.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Realizing Arch isn't for me after updating broke VLCEnglish
21·5 months agoIt is a KDE thing, but Fedora is the distro on which it works best. On a lot of other distros it often runs into problems.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Realizing Arch isn't for me after updating broke VLCEnglish
2·5 months agoI’ve tried quite a few distros (openSUSE, Ubuntu, Solus, Arch, so on) and none seem to offer this feature. It’s a shame, as it’s quite useful to have since updating a live system can sometimes cause some trouble. Even just the updating from Discover can be broken on some systems (I know openSUSE at the very least acts a bit funny when it comes to PackageKit, I think Arch as well).
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Realizing Arch isn't for me after updating broke VLCEnglish
141·5 months agoCan definitely recommend Fedora too. Software updates are at a good pace, and the system has a lot of polish all around. For example, all you need to do for updates is to press “update” in Discover and it’ll do everything for you, applying on reboot for stability. Most things “just work”.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•PSA for openSUSE Tumbleweed users wondering why Proton doesn't launch properly on a fresh installEnglish
2·6 months agoOnly new installs use SELinux by default. Existing installs continue to use AppArmor.
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•PSA for openSUSE Tumbleweed users wondering why Proton doesn't launch properly on a fresh installEnglish
3·6 months agoI am unsure. I’ll give this a try soon, as it looks like it probably does the trick. Thanks for letting me know.
EDIT: Seemingly not, at least on my setup. It was installed automatically as a dependency of Steam, but I needed to use my previous commands to get Proton to work.
VESA honestly should ban manufacturers from having anything below HDR 500 certified as HDR, as the specification is so watered down with HDR 400 and below (sRGB? Really? Why not WCG like all the other standards 500 and up?). HDR on a 300 nit display is terrible, and manufacturers should be embarrassed to sell those as HDR.
As far as I know, no. I guess it’s not exactly a good idea globally, as some games sometimes need some changes. For example there’s one or two that don’t like ITM and will have display corruption (at least last time I tested, possibly fixed now), and I have to use some extra flags to get TF2’s mouse controls working in Gamescope.
Are you using tone mapping through the Steam UI (I think the Deck has its own controls for HDR inverse tone mapping) or through the command line options you can use for games? If you are using the UI, it might be worth using the command line toggles instead as maybe the UI is setting some wrong settings. If it helps, here is the set of command line options I use on my system (modify brightness, refresh rate, and resolution to fit your display)
DXVK_HDR=1 ENABLE_HDR_WSI=1 gamescope -f -r 165 -W 3440 -H 1440 --adaptive-sync --hdr-enabled --hdr-itm-enable --hdr-itm-sdr-nits 350 --hdr-sdr-content-nits 800 --hdr-itm-target-nits 1000 gamemoderun -- %command%. In addition, it might be worth looking through the display settings to see if it’s in any sort of colour boosting HDR modes - my Alienware had to be set to “HDR Peak 1000” for colours to look as they should, as by default it messes around with things a bit. If you can as well, try some other devices that can output HDR (like a game console or Blu Ray player or something) to see if it’s making those outputs look a bit red too - if so, it’s to do with the display, and if not it’s a configuration issue.
I haven’t experienced issues with oranges on my setup (AW3423DWF, 7900 XTX). Perhaps it is to do with your hardware?
In a nutshell, it essentially increases the range of brightness values (luminance/gamma to be specific) that can be sent to a display. This allows content to both be brighter, and to display colours more accurately as there are far more brightness levels that can be depicted. This means content can look more lifelike, or have more “pop” by having certain elements be brighter than others. There’s more too, and it’s up to the game/movie/device as to what it should do with all this extra information it can send to the display. This is especially noticeable on an OLED or QD OLED display, since they can individually dim or brighten every pixel. Nits in this context refers to the brightness of the display - 1000 nits is far brighter than most conventional displays (which are usually in the 300-500 range).
What sort of system are you on, and what have you been trying? The best setup is with an AMD GPU and a more up to date distro (Fedora, Arch, so on). I can give some help if you need.
Oh boy, I should have caught that. Ironic, considering saying things like “ATM machine” is a pet peeve of mine.
In a small room where it’s the only light source, it’s still a crazy amount of light. My eyes genuinely had to get used to the brightness for a couple minutes after I set it up for the first time, and the walls sometimes looked like the ceiling light was on.
If you ever get the opportunity, try out HDR ITM tone mapping (essentially a HDR upconversion thing you can do with Gamescope on Linux) playing Persona 3 Reload on a QD OLED monitor (for that extra brightness) in a dark room. Even though it’s not even a native HDR game, with ITM it looks so good, especially because it’s a game with a lot of dark graphics mixed in with super bright. The text pops, and combat is next-level.
We don’t talk about
Brunothe Microsoft POSIX subsystem
heythatsprettygood@feddit.ukto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•What's up, selfhosters? It's selfhosting Sunday again!English
10·7 months agoToday I learned that for some reason some DNS servers don’t like SRV records, so had to troubleshoot it when people were unable to log onto my Minecraft server that is on a non-default port.


Now let’s see how you fare against my… LYSITHEA BLAST!
(Death Knight was defeated.)