

Neigsendoig (my producer) and I are very used to the C-based GNU utilities. Rust is not up our alley, that’s for sure.
Aspiring Vtuber who currently narrates for [at]CoRedRead on YouTube (Invidious is recommended, though).
Neigsendoig (my producer) and I are very used to the C-based GNU utilities. Rust is not up our alley, that’s for sure.
There’s actually a keylogging attack for Wayland, which is an LD_PRELOAD
vulnerability that can be exploited. I wonder if that attack is still viable.
I’d be happy to privately send you a few teachers you could take a look at, and then compare their claims against yours.
I could look into that, as I’m a non-Christian believer in Messiah Yeshua. It’d be a historicist-centric community, though, as that’s what I happened to be after being a futurist for most of my life. Yes, I was a recipient of the Mark of the Beast on the right hand by obeying Rome, even if I wasn’t Roman Catholic.
I’d be happy to brainstorm that idea with you privately if ever you wanted to help with that.
If I’m not mistaken, it was either Carbon or MW05 where my producer had his peak NFS experience, though he had played the likes of MW 2012, Hot Pursuit 2010, and even NFS II SE from what I remember.
I personally liked MW05 and Carbon. So did my producer, actually.
I’m taking the Rossmann route on this, and using a net in order to get games that are no longer on any storefront.
That’s what my producer, Neigsendoig, did with WWE 2K19, because it’s abandonware now by most standards.
From my research, while I could see that being the case, “Secure Boot” is classified by the Free Software Foundation and the GNU Project as Tivoization, and GPL-3 was made to fix that. That’s how I saw it, at least.
I’m glad I didn’t enable Tivoization (Secure Boot) and TPM. Those suck, and actually froze our machines. It’s literally useless at this point.
90% of games can be played on Linux, though some of them actually happened to require some sort of tweaks to get them working. That said, the experience my producer and I have had for about 5 years (August 20th I think will be 5 years) was nothing short of wondrous.
We’ll continue to use LInux until we die.
As far as I’m aware (I could be wrong on this), there’s no way OP will be able to use Ableton and Cakewalk on Linux. That’s why I recommend OP look into the DAW’s I mentioned.
I might have to take a look at maybe seeing if I could find an i3 version of this. That would be pretty cool, personally speaking.
Taking a look at the script, though, it might not be too bad if I find a way to do it with i3 or Hypr. I might need to get my producer, Neigsendoig, looking into that.
MX Linux was botted due to the amount of hits.
My producer, Neigsendoig, did a video here where he covered MX 23.
I did this in the past. And that was to wake up after stirring awake from my slumber.
I will have to disagree with that, as you can use Yabridge for the Windows VST’s when using Wine, provided they don’t require iLok. While yes, there is an issue with iLok (because I think they hate Linux users), you could still get a great selection of things specifically for the likes of Ardour, Reaper, Bitwig, LMMS, and other options. My producer, Neigsendoig, and I use Ardour and Zrythm. As for Cakewalk and Ableton, I could see how they don’t work. Apparently, FL Studio can with WINE ASIO from what Neigsendoig researched.
Neither of us would recommend a Mac at all, due to Mac being basically BSD, but with code that could raise major privacy concerns. I think Sendo (Neigsendoig) has tutorials on CoculesNation about setting up Linux for music production.
Also, I hadn’t talked about this yet, but I’d recommend OP look into Ardour, Zrythm, Reaper, and maybe Qtractor as the DAWs of choice.
I thought Bluesky was centralized, but not fully centralized. My producer thought this, but I wanted a second opinion on it. Do you happen to use Bluesky, by chance, and that happened to be how you know this?
I just have almost everything sensitive on a local machine. If I need backups, I can do local backups on something like a USB drive of sorts.
I use Obsidian for my scripts, and potentially business contracts, so I don’t make my private information public.
BlueSky is partially centralized due to most users utilizing a specific instance. Not to mention that it’s now unusable in the UK due to the Online Safety Act of 2023 now being enforced with age verification.
Windows 10 has support ending for it in October. Linux will probably be the only way to go.
With Linux, that’s impossible. However, I will say that you won’t need to worry about these privacy invading rootkits disguising themselves as anti-cheats (Ricochet, EA’s Ring 0 malware, EAC, Battleye, etc.).