Couldn’t you just overlay some cobweb pngs over the iframe? And on scroll of the iframe you could move them accordingly.
Couldn’t you just overlay some cobweb pngs over the iframe? And on scroll of the iframe you could move them accordingly.
I very rarely use big picture mode. I’m mostly on a KDE desktop. I’ve set up a shortcut to open Steam through gamescope in Big Picture mode for the rare occasion that I need it. In that case KDE’s wayland session keeps running in the background.
I have also set up gamescope with Steam as a separate login session but I can’t remember if I ever felt the need to use that.
Usually I just have Steam running in desktop mode in the background for the controller settings and the mostly superior on screen keyboard. I never noticed any slowdowns in games. I even managed to get Cities Skylines to run more stable than on SteamOS. But that might be due to zram.
Don’t know about specific Arch packages. But for my OpenSUSE experimentations I have https://gitlab.com/evlaV/linux-integration, https://steamdeck-packages.steamos.cloud/archlinux-mirror/sources/jupiter-main/ and https://github.com/firlin123/jupiter-dkms bookmarked.
I think the steamos-customizations-jupiter and linux-firmware-neptune-jupiter packages are worth a look. And I recently compiled drivers/hid/hid-steam.c
from Valve’s linux sources to get a bugfix for the controller if you run it without Steam.
Had a CyberMaxx VR headset back in the days. It had a whopping resolution of 505x230 per eye at a combined 60 Hz (so each eye only got 30 Hz). Headtracking worked with 3 degrees of freedom. The included mouse driver for DOS made the head tracking available for every DOS game even if it didn’t have support. It came with Tekwar and a Flight Unlimited demo I never could get to run.
Some games worked with stereoscopic 3D. That was about the only really awesome thing about the headset. But the 30 Hz displays made sure that you could only play for a short while anyways. Descent was nausea inducing on its own. But in VR it was a guaranteed pukefest.
Thinking about playing with the headset was always much better than actually doing it. I’d pull it out every few years and then put it back into storage. Last I heard it died at my brother’s.
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.
Hardest part was getting full disk encryption working with an on-screen keyboard to enter a passphrase at boot. I used unl0kr for that which wasn’t (probably still isn’t) in the OpenSUSE packages.
I’m just happy that all the sources are made available by Valve to make this possible. Even though I wish they would upstream them much quicker. But at least it has enabled me to run a normal Linux distribution on my Deck and enhance it as I saw fit.
I think Hellblade 2 is one of the best looking games currently.
Good thing about my !chronicillness@lemmy.world is that I don’t have to adher to society’s waking hours anymore.
I should pick that up again. I remember getting stuck somewhere in the first one.
Super Mario All Stars, just to spite Nintendo.
Does it work with Wayland? That was my only complaint with Barrier last time I tried to use it.
I wish I had some money lying around to make a bot to indiscriminately buy random stocks at 420.69.
I inject the weed and do the sex all the time!
Thanks, sounds good. I need the running system, so I’d first set up BTRFS on one disc, test it and then add the other disc.
Those Chinese astronomers who documented a supernova from which we can now study the remnants of with precise timing.
I wonder how long it will take until all the mods shown are available.
I will be decrypting from a small busybox inside the initrd. I suspect that it will decrypt both drives if the passphrase is the same. At least that’s how it works on the desktop.
Why not ZFS’s own encryption?
Though I would rather go with BTRFS since I don’t have any experience with ZFS.
SDDM seems to be severely underdeveloped. It doesn’t seem to get nearly as much love as the rest of KDE. You might consider switching to GDM or another display manager that does what you want. You can be happy that your HDMI monitor is not mirrored smaller on your ultrawide.
Dang. Well time to write a browser engine in JavaScript! (Or do this server side)