Streaming games to my living room just got a whole lot better😎
I don't think it ships with a desktop environment by default; I think they're just referring to the Qt framework. If it is mentioning a desktop environment - it's probably LXQt.
For those curious about the "Memory on Package"; this isn't soldered on RAM. The RAM is integrated into the CPU package itself. This can be a good thing; improved performance and power efficiency, increased memory bandwidth which allows the CPU to talk to the RAM at insane speeds due to how close the RAM and CPU are to each other . The downside to all of this, is you can't upgrade the RAM. Intel's probably gonna pull an Apple, and charge you an insane amount for more RAM. Also, currently they only support memory capacities of 16GB and 32GB.
I salute you!🫡
There's a plethora of places. Github, Codeburg, Sourceforge. I'm definitely missing some others too. (There's also Gitlab but I don't really recommend Gitlab because of some recent decisions)
You live close to a microcenter?? Luckyyyyyy
I hope either ZLUDA and/or actual CUDA works on NVK in the near future.
This is my hope as well. I do think that at least an attempt at CUDA support for NVK is planned, but if it is, it's likely still a ways out. But who knows! They've been progressing so fast, it might come sooner than we think! (Assuming CUDA is even on the roadmap.)
Better yet AMD could release something that can compete with CUDA but that seems highly I. probable.
Unfortunately AMD's focus doesn't seem to be on Ray Tracing/AI or a CUDA alternative at the moment. But this would definitely be a welcomed feature.
It was a picture of a glowie, soyjacking, with "CIA" in the background. It was a grainy image with a green glow and grainy white accents
Edit: Scroll down to the fifth image. It's near identical to the one that was removed. (I would post the image but the original was removed by a mod so here's the link.)
Man, I loved Dune so much. I haven't picked up the sequels yet because I still have so much in my backlog, lol.
Excluding hardware (microcode, UEFI, etc); within my Linux system, the only proprietary software I have installed are Nvidia drivers and Steam (installed via flatpak). When I first made the switch to Linux, I was actually shocked at the minimal amount of proprietary software I actually used/needed.