That’s interesting; kernel 6.4 enabled VRAM overclocking on my 5600 XT while disabling it on the 6900 XT.
That’s interesting; kernel 6.4 enabled VRAM overclocking on my 5600 XT while disabling it on the 6900 XT.
So far, I’ve really only tested my VRAM overclock in the Nova: Covert Ops, but I’ve noticed that the cutscenes run a lot smoother. Before, there were a few that were a bit choppy, but now, they’re buttery-smooth!
I used a program called CoreCtrl. I don’t think it’s in any distribution repositories, but you can install it from source, which doesn’t take too long. Though, you will need to add a special boot parameter to your GRUB file.
We still do sometimes. You’d be surprised by how many IRC channels still exist.
Thank you! I noodled around with that in a GUI program called GPRename and found a workable solution I just had to modify yours a bit to make it work there. Here’s the finished solution, at least when using a graphical program like GPRename: track\d*[ger] *
Well, at least it won’t get you in trouble at work or otherwise around others.
I think it would be best to hold off until the Lemmy developers push out an update which solves the issue of having separate communities for the same topic on multiple instances. For example, multi-community feeds or merging instances.
This is true. It’s also why nuclear power plants aren’t a lot more common.
A lot of folks unfortunately think open-source software is much more vulnerable than closed-source software because anyone can inspect it. The great irony of it, as everyone here knows, the opposite is actually often true.
For me, the worst part is actually the duplicate communities. Sure, it’s nice that newbies can have these duplicate subs so they don’t have to learn how to traverse the Lemmyverse, but it would be really nice if duplicates could be avoided. Like, maybe if Lemmy instances kept better records of communities on other instances.
Yeah, except when you want to do anything with other instances.
Browser extensions help a bit, but just not on iOS.
No problem! It’s kinda funny that you mention that it’s in Debian Sid. I was running Debian Bookworm when I installed CoreCtrl and I actually installed from source.