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Cake day: Jun 11, 2023

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I have been encountering it more lately, but that’s because of the types of sites I was using.

The ones that may not work tend to be; banking (usually okay though), work-related (ranging from applications to gig work to job specific), and then if you happen to run into something that requires chromium as a way to function, such as some specific extensions or most functional web music creation tools, like MIDI support.

B-b-b-buuuuut I only use Firefox and all my stock and banking sites work fine on FF, those job sites that needed chromium can get by with Edge, and if you’re using web browsers for MIDI tools, really, what are you doing?



This is real time and based from one image.

Deep fakes up to this point are generally not real time, and are generally trained on the source, then with different methods can be applied to the video. Say, making Kermit the Frog doing a dance as the final video, but it’s been deep faked to look like Ms. piggy.

There are tons of examples of AI that post process deep fakes. This is one of the few real time ones that you can link to a webcam, have a single photo, and you are the deepfake.

From my understanding, that hasn’t been done yet, at least not in the AI spaces I’ve been part of.



The only times it’s OK are when it’s planned for specific softwares. For example, I can’t run Rocksmith 2014 on native Deck but it works fine in Windows. Similarly, software that’s OS limited would be another use.

But if your main thing is gaming, and you aren’t dual booting… Yeah, I’m judging you. (And I mainly use Windows on PC. But why, why, why would you need to only run Windows on a Steam Deck without a specific purpose


I really dislike this trend of suggesting people to buy Google phones specifically to de-Google them. Like, shouldn’t we be avoiding giving them sales?

I get it, the phones are decent. I just think it’s kind of counter-intuitive.



So rather than fixing the issue they just removed it entirely.

That’s kind of a joke from a “privacy” based browser.


I’ve had similar issues/experiences with Jellyfin as well.


YouTube comments are wildly hit or miss. You either get funny memes, thank you changed my life, or absolute garbage not worth reading.

But as you said it definitely depends on the actual creator and the type of content.


I didn’t even mention if the gamer is interested in VR, then they’re going to be limited by what headsets they can use.

I love my Reverb G2, amazing resolution for the price I paid. Part of the price I paid is being locked into windows, since it uses Windows Mixed Reality.

I know this is a bit of a separate thing but it’s still related to gaming so I thought I’d mention it. Still quite minor, especially since most of the better headsets are fully compatible with Linux, but my whole point is that there’s always something niche.


It’s really not disingenuous. EAC is prevalent and there are still plenty of games that simply don’t work with it right now, with very little reason from the player end (like why one game in EAC works while another doesn’t)

Tbh, the only multiplayer games I care about are usually p2p like Phasmophobia or Killing Floor 2. Both of these run fine on Linux and KF2 uses EAC - no issues. However I do enjoy some games of Paladins from time to time, which is unplayable due to anti-cheat. It being the main multiplayer game I play with friends makes it harder to justify switching the desktop PC fully to Linux. Minor work arounds to get working multiplayer in gmes like ROR2, annoying but whatever. Forcing to use proton to access games like Rocket League, fine I guess.

But straight up not working just makes it very hard to actively suggest Linux as an alternative if the gamer wants an easy online experience.

I agree personally, I don’t care about playing Tarkov or CoD these days. That doesn’t mean I’m unaffected by other games with the exact same issue, which is why I disagree that we shouldn’t care about them being playable. Just because we don’t care doesn’t mean other gamers don’t. Even still, the option is kind of why gamers build gaming computers. To be able to play everything they can conceivably throw at it. Before I was on my blizzard boycott a friend bought me the then new Modern Warfare and a group of friends all got together. If I’d have been a Linux only user back then I’d have been left out of the lobby.

I just don’t understand how we expect people to embrace Linux when we’re suggesting it for gaming when ~28% of all CoD players on PC (Windows). We want more widespread adoption of Linux don’t we? That happens by making it accessible, which means a game will work with little to no fiddling in the games that are most popular. If Timmy interested in Linux is getting left out of his friend groups gaming sessions, Timmy might not continue to pursue the OS out of convenience because playing games together is fun. They find a different game together and oops, turns out BF2042 also doesn’t support Linux. Battlefield 1, anyone?

Again, what I’m getting at is if we’re suggesting Linux as a gaming OS then it seems reasonable that the shortcomings are mentioned since there is a high likelihood that a new PC builder will inevitably be interested in one of the games we’ve said we don’t care about* especially if the game is an online multiplayer game. The likelihood of it working right away is low. If a gamer wants to play that game and it’s not supported by Linux, then they probably won’t be using Linux, further pushing back the year of Linux until the end of time.

Bless the Steam Deck for understanding that and attempting to remedy it. It’s biggest accomplishment is that now there are so many games that do just work, so let’s not be disingenuous by pretending all of them do. The work left to be done here is not on proton but with online support.


So Linux for gaming isn’t really a full option unfortunately. It’s just frustrating to have it constantly recommended when quite frankly, the Linux catalogue has to take multiplayer games into account and yet that part is always ignored initially until it’s brought up in comments. The suggestion should be qualified with single player only or very limited multiplayer, mostly to those with explicit Linux support.

Great on Deck, though! Not great for multiplayer games unless it’s supported via GeForce Now and you’re okay with that latency in your online games.

Linux is great for many things. It can also be great for gaming in many cases, but it currently is not the end all be all for gaming. Especially in a thread someone asking about Windows of all things…

Tl;Dr multiplayer always gets forgotten by people suggesting Linux, ironic considering that’s the sole breaking point for gaming on Linux these days. It can be frustrating as someone who enjoys both single and multiplayer games, where my single player games are played mostly on Deck and everything else is on desktop, I can’t exactly switch over to Linux when the games I want to play don’t work. Going looking for answers, Linux just isn’t it this time.



I use my card provider’s version of this, Capital One. I’ve used privacy.com once too but I figured I may as well limit the amount of information that goes out.

I’m not sure that it’s possible for you to… Mask your purchases? The option is more the ability to set end-dates - a one week subscription is only one week and will never renew, etc, and of course to prevent them from having your actual card details.

Either way, realistically you’d want to look into the ownership of these services - Eno, Privacy, etc and decide from there if it’s worth it to you.