Rose here. Also @umbraroze for non-kbin stuff.
32-bit software is still absolutely supported on amd64. Just go to C:\Program Files (x86)
and be amazed.
It’s funny, the only Linux software I’ve ever used that was only shipped as binaries was Loki games. Also, the only software that broke after binary compatibility went south. There used to be a giant tarball of old libraries and jiggerypokery that enabled the Loki games to sorta kinda work.
I was kind of sad to see that Sid Meier’s Alpha Centauri didn’t run too well, but then I tried to play the GOG version on x64 Windows 11 and there are occasional weird issues. So, eh.
Windows: Can you run 25 year old binaries? Yes you can.
Linux: Can you build 25 year old software from source? Yes you can.
Oh you fancy PC people and your fancy syscall
instruction.
I still don’t know why I could remember jsr $ab1e
. I didn’t even write that much assembly.
Or:
Software has a Linux version and it only comes as a .deb
Depends on a load of packages exclusive to Ubuntu and installing it on stock Debian is bloody impossible
Yeah I remember when Steam came to Linux. Never got it to work. I hope it is better nowadays? (Sadly can’t check. My only pure Linux box at the moment is a Raspberry Pi, I don’t expect Steam to run on that either)
deleted by creator
Uptime ~30 years
Too generous for Gentoo.
“Maybe if I tweak the kernel config juuuuust a little bit today” “Is it just me or did this particular version of gcc make the kernel 0.0002% slower? I need to do some tests” “…Dunno, it just feels slower today, I guess I need to recompile the whole system”
Uptime: 30 minutes, tops
Well, Google Photos shouldn’t be considered a “backup” solution to begin with. Never mind that both Google and Apple scan the content in their respective services, but there’s just no guarantee that they don’t modify the data on cloud. “Oooh guys, we just invented a revolutionary new photo compression algorithm! Also hosting data is kinda expensive! So pay up if you want your originals.” …and there’s occasional reports that these services just straight up corrupted some old files while no one was looking at them. Good going.
I just treat my Android phone like any other camera I own and use. Copy the files from phone to PC and from there to my NAS, and I use ACDSee’s DAM functionality.
I used to use Ubuntu on my netbook years and years ago, until I came to the conclusion “dammit, at this point, I would have had easier time if I had just installed Debian to begin with”, and installed Debian
Scrivener is still the absolute best word processor for ginormous writing projects. There are FOSS projects that do some parts of it right, but fall far behind in the others. It’s particularly frustrating because my usual FOSS approach would be to use other tools that make up for the inadequacies, but Scrivener pretty much nails the “what to include and what to leave out” equation. It’s a great combo of a word processor, project management tool and a research/notes tool, all rolled into one.
I have a Zyxel NAS server that just offers a SMB share. I’m just dumping my photos there under YYYY/MM/DD scheme, and converting all of my Nikon NEF files to DNG. (For importing photos to the NAS and generating backups, I have a PowerShell script and a PowerAutomate action. Also mild usage of Dropbox to transfer files from my cellphone.)
For actual management of photos, I use ACDSee Photo Studio Professional, and it just writes all tag information to the files themselves, so I can basically use any other software for photo management. For actual photo editing, I use DXO PhotoLab and Affinity Photo most of the time.
Yeah, the thing is, “a monad is a monoid in the category of endofunctors” is kind of a meme among non-Haskell developers. Personally, I think Haskell is a very interesting language. The mathematical jargon, however, is impenetrable, and this particular expression is kind of the poster child. I’mma go look at Erlang if I want my functional language fix without making my head hurt, thank ye very much.