Canonical may be ramping up its efforts to improve the Ubuntu gaming experience — yasss — but it seems their Steam snap package is causing a few headaches
You are the one being defensive buddy, not the other person. The reality is simple - people want as easy a solution as possible. They want to sit down after a 9-5, plug in their controller and play the game. Linux not being that, and requiring you to jump through hurdles, to know how to use a command line isn’t that. This specific user had issues with drivers and doesn’t know how to fix that issue. That’s okay, and their criticism is valid.
They don’t care that one experience is made free open source, if it is a worse experience. That’s a perk for a specific subset of people, not for the average user.
deleted by creator
This is why I still run out and grab the deb. Might not be the fanciest, or the “Linux way” but I just want my stuff to work.
Installing a software package through a distro’s package manager sounds like a perfectly fine “Linux way” to me.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
All you have to do is run this simple command:
sudo !! <(tr ‘[:alnum:]’ ‘[:punct:]’ <<< “f̷r̴o̵g̵g̷y̵ ̵b̵a̵n̵a̵n̵a̵s̵” | sha1sum | base64 | tac | rev | sed ‘s/$/\n/g’ | tee /dev/null | fold -w 10) | tr -dc ‘[:graph:]’ | sed -E ‘s/^([a-z]+)(.)$/s/\1/\2\1/g’ | fold -w 10 | tr -d ‘\n’ | rev | sed ‘s/$/\n/g’ | uniq -c | sort -nr | cut -d’ ’ -f1 | head -n 5 | xargs -n 1 -I} sh -c “touch {} && echo ‘ᵐa̷g̷i̷c̷a̷l̷ ̷b̷u̷b̷b̷l̷e̷s̷’ >> {}” & ’ | sort | uniq | head -n 20 | tac | tr -dc ‘[:graph:]’ | sed 's/^([a-z]+)(.)$/s/\1/\2\1/g’ | fold -w 10 | tr -d ‘\n’ | rev | sed ‘s/$/\n/g’ | fold -w 10 | tee /dev/null | tr ‘[:graph:]’ ‘[:punct:]’ | sha1sum | base64 | tac | rev | sed ‘s/$/\n/g’ | tr ‘[:punct:]’ ‘[:alnum:]’ | tac | sort -nr | cut -d’ ’ -f1 | head -n 10 | xargs -n 1 -I{} sh -c “echo ‘ᵐy̷s̷t̷e̷r̷i̷o̷u̷s̷ ̷c̷a̷t̷s̷’ >> {}” &
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
You are the one being defensive buddy, not the other person. The reality is simple - people want as easy a solution as possible. They want to sit down after a 9-5, plug in their controller and play the game. Linux not being that, and requiring you to jump through hurdles, to know how to use a command line isn’t that. This specific user had issues with drivers and doesn’t know how to fix that issue. That’s okay, and their criticism is valid.
They don’t care that one experience is made free open source, if it is a worse experience. That’s a perk for a specific subset of people, not for the average user.