@popcar2 yes, the ntfs problem hit me as well, as I previously commented on other occasions. Also, I didn’t think that intel mobile integrated gpu’s wouldn’t be recognised by opengl or vulkan, but that’s how it goes apparently
I am a fully blind programming enthusiast, I begun my programming career with bgt, a scripting language.
Now, I know #c, #c#, #rust, #python and probably others, always looking forward to learning new things.
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@popcar2 yes, the ntfs problem hit me as well, as I previously commented on other occasions. Also, I didn’t think that intel mobile integrated gpu’s wouldn’t be recognised by opengl or vulkan, but that’s how it goes apparently
that’s possible, ntfs and linux are known to not work very well, as you probably have seen in this thread.
@MyFairJulia wait, you can run games from ntfs drives with linux? what ntfs driver is recommended for that? is ntfs3g broken? I’m asking because each time I try to do something like that, I do get permission issues, as you say. Worse, each time windows would make a file, the linux side would come up with a permission error when trying to access it. That’s why, I don’t use ntfs stuff anymore at all
@theshatterstone54 @dvdnet90 yeah, those kinds of games are always reported to have issues for whatever reason
@falsem @Voytrekk because they always want to be remembered in history for something good, and they’re desperately trying to make something that will eventually, through no try of their own, end up both *good* and ethical. Also, they want people to use their stuff more, so that they can eventually make it proprietary or something.
@BloodSlut @ShaunaTheDead hohoho, a good head start! I had to clear some environment variables from time to time as well, especially when it comes to wine stuff misinterpreting some vars I thought are only for some specific programs I use, so it’s not the first time such happened to me. Glad it worked for you, also glad you worked out what env var to clear.
@ShaunaTheDead @BloodSlut of course it matters. Environment variables get passed to wine, after which other processes inherit them, simply because they are children of wine. Because wine makes them available to windows calls too, well, you get them in wine processes.
@ShaunaTheDead @BloodSlut what do you mean? you can use different wine prefixes for different applications, so I don’t quite get it. Also, outside bottles, I’m not sure you can run wine in flatpak
@ShaunaTheDead @BloodSlut yeah, I don’t think that the system wide dotnet will work under wine with the windows dependencies programs want, but yeah, if it does that’ll be awesome
@JasSmith @miggs597 @F04118F @bionade24 lol, that’s completely hilarious imo. Still though, that bug is definitely weird, I never got it my self on ubuntu or any of its derivatives. Is it only a pop OS issue then?
@bionade24 @miggs597 @F04118F @JasSmith I’m a bit out of the loop here, but what was the bug actually? Did he do this on livestream?
@setInner234 @deong yes, uninstall gtk-desktop-portal-gnome if you aren’t using the gnome desktop, same for the kde variant if you aren’t using kde. The gtk portal is most generic, it’s supposed to be for any setup which doesn’t have its own portals like many, or those who only have the minimum required, those which have something to do with compositor support, for example wlroots based setups. If your desktop has a portal backend, don’t use the gtk one as you may be missing in functionality, arch devs should make more specific portal backend packages conflict with the generic gtk one, but o well.
yeah, wayland is awesome, unless you really need global shortcuts decided by the application, or a tun of other accessibility features. Still though, as you said, for most cases, wayland is good, and even the a11y features are getting ironed out, ever so slowly.
@Tersevs can you detail the process a bit? where goes what component?