[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Thanks for the suggestion. My post over there currently has 48 upvotes and had at least one person comment they've uploaded their data; a few others said they will do it "soon" or "tomorrow"

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Thanks a lot for the help!

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Awesome. Thanks for helping out!

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

Hopefully someone dumps this data for you if you don't have it then.

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 4 months ago

I added a paragraph to the post explaining the difference between StreetPass and SpotPass if that helps.

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 5 months ago

That's how I work, But I use FreeTube instead, which works the same way. There's a trending videos page, but it doesn't reccomend stuff based on your history.

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 5 months ago

Thanks so much for that. I can't even make out any extra blurriness where the logo previously was.

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 5 months ago

True. But I've seen apps be forked by it's own developers before. One example is Prism Launcher, which was forked from PolyMC because one of the original devs "went rogue" and revoked access from all the other devs because their political views didn't align with his political views. So he abused the power he had and just kicked them out. So the devs who were kicked out forked the program and continued it as Prism Launcher. That's how I understand the situation anyway. It's funny, because PolyMC which Prism Launcher is forked from is itself a fork of MultiMC.

So it's a valid question.

12
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee to c/privacy@lemmy.ml

I was born in 2002 and wasn't really much exposed to the internet until 2012. I saw my older brother and sister watching YouTube on my Dad's laptop in 2007 with a (presumably ethernet) cable, but I'm sure they weren't using dial-up, and I think most people had abandoned it by that time.

Regardless, I was learning a bit recently about how dial-up worked, and saw that it was still possible to set up in modern-day; so it got me wondering what the privacy implications would be if I hypothetically were to use it. I imagine it would be terrible!

10
submitted 6 months ago by DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee to c/totk@lemmy.world

I got this wallpaper officially from My Nintendo Does anyone know of a version of this official artwork that doesn't have the games logo in it?

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 9 months ago

Great! Happy to have inspired you without even meaning to 😄

30

Hey everyone. I've been really wanting to start a survival world that acts similar to peaceful, but without the usual things like the lack of hunger and extremely quick regeneration. Are there any data packs you know of that can do this if this isn't possible in-game via commands? Mods are a last resort for this.

What I'm looking for exactly in my world is: No Monsters. Neutral mobs can attack just as they would in easy/normal/hard. I noticed Polar Bears don't attack when you go near their cubs in peaceful; I want them to attack me just as they normally should. Hunger still depletes just as it would in any other difficulty.

Things I want that I can already do in-game. Generate no structures Pillager Patrols cannot spawn Wandering Trader's cannot spawn Phantoms cannot spawn

Anyone know how I can do any of this? I've already began my world in peaceful and want to change it as soon as I can.

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 10 months ago

Thanks for the resources. I'll look into it.

12
submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee to c/australianpolitics@aussie.zone

I’m a 21 yr old male. I was never taught anything about politics in school despite going all the way through year 12, and my Mum knows little because she doesn’t have to vote due to the year she moved here from New Zealand years before I was born, so doesn’t pay attention to the ins and outs of things in politics, and therefore didn’t teach me much throughout child-hood and teenage-hood about it.

I was born here in Australia in 2002, so I do have to vote. But I hate that every time a vote comes around, I am completely uninformed and have to vote based off of the miniscule amount of information I have which may not even be correct. If I try to use the internet to research about it, all I can find is mainstream media pushing towards one view or the other. I don’t appreciate being manipulated by media, and would rather find an unbiased source of information; so the very fact that I have difficulty finding unbiased information (or even just something approachable to a beginner) very much gate-keeps my ability to learn and be informed about what’s even going on in my country and develop an opinion that I’m comfortable with. So does anyone have any advice for me? I don’t even understand much of the basics of how the Australian government works, and what I read online about it, I find confusing, because it constantly uses political terminology it expects me to already know.

Edit: Thanks for the comments everyone, I appreciate the advice you've given me

[-] DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee 2 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

I’d hate to select an ultra specific customized version that gets abandoned by the maintainers in a year or two, I generally run machines for about 8 years.

TLDR (Apologies for the crazy long comment): Basically, I say that if you want peace of mind the project isn't going to be abandoned; choose one of the most popular distro's and one of the most popular DE's. And I reccomend a bunch of options for Distro's and DE's you might like to use.

That makes sense. If you want the peace of mind that the distro or Desktop Environment isn't going to be abandoned in a couple of years; that's why you go with one of the popular ones; they aren't going away any time soon or the foreseeable future. The distro developers usually customise the included Desktop Environment a bit to cater to their specific audience. Choose a popular distro, and choose one of the officially maintained flavours they make available, rather then a community maintained one, which is much more likely to be abandoned after a couple years. Here's an example of the popular desktop environments:

KDE Plasma has been around since 1998 & developed since 1996, and is regularly developed, improved, and updated.

Cinnamon has been around since 2011 and is developed by the Linux Mint distro developers; Linux Mint being one of the top 3 most popular Linux distributions; not going away anytime soon. It's also regularly updated too. And since Linux Mint are the devs; It's the main, most supported flavour available for Linux Mint.

GNOME I'm not a fan of it personally. It's been around since 1999, developed since 1997; GNOME is associated with Ubuntu and is one of, if not the most popular desktop environments available; of course this is also regularly updated too, and not going away anytime soon.

Mate (pronounced mah-tay) has been around since 2011; it was forked from an old version of GNOME due to the backlash GNOME was getting at the time for drastic changes they were making to their own DE; and made for people who preferred the GNOME 2 design. Again: regularly worked on and updated

Budgie released in 2014 and is developed by Solus distro developers. In my opinion, it's absolutely beautiful with it's minimalistic yet modern visual design, but I can see why it wouldn't be for everyone; still worth it to check out.

Why don't you setup a Linux virtual machine on your Windows PC, install a bunch of different flavours of different distro's, and try the different Desktop Environment's out for yourself? You might surprise yourself and find one that you adore the look of. I know from experience that using the environments themselves is way different to simply looking at screenshots or watching video's.

The best options for distro's to try out imo are:

Linux Mint (Debian based; probably the best beginner friendly distro out there, just about everything is doable without the terminal)

Manjaro (Arch based; made to be an arch-like distro that's a beginner-to-linux but familiar-with-computers, and average-user friendly distro. A common misconception is that it's very unstable and prone to breakage: this is not true anymore and was more an issue in it's early days)

Pop!_OS (Debian based; brilliant for gamers and average computer users; they use GNOME, but System76 (the devs) are working on their own Desktop Environment written from scratch to replace GNOME; last I checked, there haven't been any screenshots revealed of it.

Those are my top picks but I know my small list is missing many others of the great and popular distro's. Making sure you can have a system that's supported for years to come is easy if you pick one of the popular distro's. If you don't want to update the system for years at a time; don't choose a distro with a rolling-release update system (like Arch, Manjaro, Garuda, EndeavourOS etc. which is basically anything Arch-based) If that's how you use your system; Linux Mint with the Cinnamon, Mate, or XFCE flavour is a perfect choice. And if you want to, you ARE able to install any other DE on Linux Mint even if it's not officially supported, and you can have as many DE's installed at once as you want; though that will all require the terminal.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee to c/gamedev@programming.dev

I've done hardly any game development in my life (making a simple Gamemaker game at high-school in 2016 or 17, & making a box fall in Unity a couple years back; so you can call me a complete noob. But I was just wondering: If I for whatever reason wanted to make my game work natively on a Bunch of different Windows versions, like 95, 98, 98SE, 2000, ME, XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, 10 & 11; would that be possible without making separate versions of the game for different Windows versions? It sounds like a cool project for doing just for the fun of it, for learning about the different OS versions once I already have more experience with development on modern Windows. What if I made the game on Godot game engine? Can Godot games even run on such old operating systems? I heard that Windows 2000 and above are NT based, and major Windows versions prior to that ran on something else: would this greatly affect the development process at all?

Clarification: Sorry, but I should have clarified that my development platform is Linux, and would be porting to Windows, which obviously should change the answer to my question drastically; I have no idea why I worded things to sound like I would develop the game on Windows first and foremost; but that was my mistake.

22
submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by DreitonLullaby@lemm.ee to c/linux_gaming@lemmy.world

Like many old PC games, the game comes with an activation-code on the back of the case. The installer asks me for the 25 digit code on the case. I look, and I can see that the code definitely contains 25 digits. But than when I try to input the 25 digit code into the 5 text boxes provided (5 digits per box) only 4 digits can be inputted into any of the text-boxes, meaning I can only input a max of 20 characters through all the boxes, and the installation fails. Does anyone know how to get around this? Thanks.

Update: With a suggestion from within the comments, I managed to solve the issue by installing Microsoft Core Fonts using the command winetricks corefonts. Once corefonts was installed, I can now input all 5 digits into each text box.

That fixes the text box issue. Now I can't play the game because after inserting Disc 2 to begin the next part of the installation, I get the 'feature transfer error', as the window calls it: "Error: -1603 Fatal error during installation. Consult Windows Installer Help (Msi.chm) or MSDN for more information."

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DreitonLullaby

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