

All the Portal characters, really. Cave, GLaDOS, Wheatly, Chell…
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All the Portal characters, really. Cave, GLaDOS, Wheatly, Chell…


To be fair it was a third party partner, not Discord itself. But you of course knew that since you read the first sentence of the article.
One of Discord’s third-party customer service providers was compromised by an “unauthorized party”
Directory Lister is a perfect fit for this. Docker instructions here.
Disclaimer: I am the author of Directory Lister. Feel free to reach out with questions.


Now THAT’S some mental gymnastics!


What does this even mean?


Yup, seems mostly like a fear of the unknown.


As posted in another thread already…
There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.


As I already said in another thread…
There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.


If you enable Secure Boot you should also set a BIOS password for this very reason.


There’s nothing wrong with Secure Boot and enabling it can prevent a small subset of attack vectors with no real downsides. That being said, the things Secure Boot does protect against aren’t likely to be an issue for most users but it’s nothing to be afraid of.


This looks like exactly what I’ve been searching for. Will try it out when I’m home.


I connect my primary and backup servers on 10G directly via a crossover cable for transferring ZFS snapshots. No actual 10G switches or anything at the moment but if I add any more servers I need to back up I’ll probably get a small 10G switch to put in between.


I clicked through to the article but don’t see a video (or a link to any video). Am I blind?


Turning on FSR helps this a lot though. I frequently game on my 4K TV with FAR and it looks pretty damned good.


I do believe Moonlight is a bit better but Steam Streaming has been reliable and high enough quality for me not to care enough to use Moonlight most of the time.


No, it isn’t.
EDIT: After reading other comments I realize I mistook GeForce Now for GeForce Experience. While I still disagree that SD/Linux is “crying out for it” I actually think bringing GeForce Now to Linux would be a good move.


You’ll still probably be disappointed.


As long as you render the games at the Steam Deck native resolution (i.e. 1280x800) and use the FSR upscaling option this works perfectly. I do this to output to my 4K TV and the games run more or less the same as they would on the Deck itself with great visual quality. A 1080p TV should work the same if not better.
If you have Docker hand you can use my project Directory Lister to do just this quick and easily (Docker docs).