TCB13

joined 2 years ago
[–] TCB13 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

The problem is that the only decent resolution version was the one from cover galaxy and that’s no longer available on the link you provided :(

That one you’re talking about is from the vinyl soundtrack and not quite the same thing.

[–] TCB13 2 points 1 month ago

The cached image doesn't seem to be a scan, maybe someone got it from some source or leak. It may be of the Dreamcast version or some other release after that with the same cover. Maybe PS3 or XBOX...

[–] TCB13 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

I've the same opinion you do. I loved to play SA1 and the "adventure field" vs "action stage" thing was the perfect balance between the open world you could explore and the more linear gameplay.

SA1 was a very good game, then came out SA2, a poorly executed thing that forces you straight into mini game style games, nothing to explore, no hub word to make the experience consistent. SA2 kinda feels like a 2D gameboy-style Sonic game. The way thing were tied together between the story of each character, "adventure field" and "action stage" was just very well thought out-

And there's also another problem, the PC version of SA2 is a also a piece of crap. While Sonic Adventure DX wasn't perfect things actually worked mostly fine out of the box however in SA2 not even gamepads work.

Btw, I'm looking for this: https://lemmy.world/post/21563379

[–] TCB13 -2 points 1 month ago

The normal and recommended Proxmox file structure is what you've after running rm -rf /. Just move to Incus (LXD) and be done with it.

Incus provides a unified experience to deal with both LXC containers and VMs. If you’re running a modern version of Proxmox then you’re already running LXC containers so why not move to Incus that is made by the same people? Why keep dragging all of the Proxmox overhead and potencial issues?

Incus is free can be installed on any clean Debian system with little to no overhead and on the release of Debian 13 it will be included on the repositories. Another interesting advantage of Incus is that you can move containers and VMs between hosts with different base kernels and Linux distros.

Read more here: https://tadeubento.com/2024/replace-proxmox-with-incus-lxd/

[–] TCB13 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

KISS

Debian is KISS. Grab it and use, no need to overcomplicate things.

[–] TCB13 2 points 1 month ago

Sorry here’s a better tutorial. I might write one, it is interesting that they all suck in different ways.

https://starbeamrainbowlabs.com/blog/article.php?article=posts/237-WebDav-Nginx-Setup.html

The folder is defined by the “root” directive. Like with any other nginx setup.

[–] TCB13 2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Cam be anything you want, just have to install nginx and configure it: https://medium.com/learn-or-die/build-a-webdav-server-with-nginx-8660a7a7311

[–] TCB13 2 points 2 months ago

For those who want to keep macOS due to some reason: https://github.com/blueboxd/chromium-legacy

[–] TCB13 2 points 2 months ago
[–] TCB13 7 points 2 months ago

It could be an amazing change that results in much more progress for hardware acceleration on guests of various types (since that is what vmware is good at) in kvm…

Yeah but VMware was good. And I'm not seeing Broadcom investing into porting the "proprietary goodness" of VMware into KVM. I just see then looking at KVM and saying "that's good enough" and seeing it a cost reduction measure.

[–] TCB13 19 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I've questions about this.

People are talking about it like it is the greatest thing ever, however, isn't this yet another result of the Broadcom acquisition? After firing a bunch of people , now this. Maybe they just don't want to maintain the "existing proprietary virtualization code" so they're moving to KVM. Less costs, less people.

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