
New study reveals most classic video games are completely unavailable

I use Arch on all my systems now. It does great for gaming on both my beefy gaming PC and my little work laptop (within their respective punching weights). I haven't felt the need to explore CachyOS or any other variants for performance gains and I really do appreciate how bare bones Arch is. Just having the lightweight OS that isn't doing a darn thing beyond what I've asked it to claws back plenty of performance, although I'm speaking more in contrast to Windows than other distros having any sort of bloat.
Still, Arch has been the first distro I really committed to, I've been on it for a year and a half now and learning how to build it out taught me a lot about Linux.
Also, I'm just never sure how long some of this offshoot distros will hold on for, you know? Is that unfounded?
Second paragraph?
Tesla is just the latest to see the symbol of bearishness, which occurs when a company’s 50-day moving average crosses and drops below the 200-day average.
As an example,
https://assets.finbold.com/uploads/2024/06/What-is-a-death-cross--1024x631.jpg
The aesthetic is impeccable, but I can't even begin to see anything from the trailer that makes this stand out as an MP shooter? I was already not interested in the slightest because I'm just not down for any sort of GaaS these days, I want single player experiences, but WTF was that?
They threw in some kinda line about death not being the end ... in 2025? Death and rebirth is not a new thing. Go play Deathloop instead, I think it's tragically underrated and the MP can be totally ignored if you like, although its asymmetric design is also interesting if you want to engage with it.
Right? It's amazing how easy it is to stand up to people who can't do anything about it!
As an American close to the tech industry, I'm often jealous of the GDPR. I understand it may not be perfect and often feels restrictive, but I think we're seeing the results of unfettered "innovation" here in America right now and realizing that most of this "innovation" is not anything any of us ever wanted or needed and not nearly worth the price.
At some point in the past I noticed there is no longer an option to even opt-out of most emails. When purchasing something from a site, they'll usually get my email as part of the ordering process and while I have searched and searched, most don't make any indication for opting out. You'll only notice days later when you're getting spammed with promotions, sometimes daily.
As well, further restrictions must've been loosened because there are companies I've dealt with years ago that have begun emailing me promotions. Just the other week I got an email from a company that sounded vaguely familiar but I couldn't recall. When I searched my inbox, I had bought a custom USB cable from them nearly 6 years ago.
Complete and utter lack of respect for consumer privacy. Disgusting. I hate it here.
“It trivialises what we’re facing,” says epidemiologist Michael Osterholm.
Oh, OK. So it's worse than "zombie deer disease". Cool. Cool, cool, cool.
I cannot upvote this enough. "Just migrate to X, it's every bit as good!" when end users know it's not is a disingenuous argument and even if they don't have the technical know-how to explain exactly why they feel this way, they'll feel the deception. It only reinforces a growing distrust in tech.
The argument has to be made honestly. It's not quite as good, but almost. Those few things you'll miss will require an adjustment, but the overall value (a lot of times just literally, it costs less!) will become evident.
I know we're all Linux nerds here and enthused to get people onboard, but the battle right now we're facing is one of trust and security and must be grounded in those notions because while great strides have been made in convenience and accessibility, big corps will always be able to bankroll themselves over those points.
As someone who has worked in the tech industry near Seattle, I don't know how well known it is to the wider populace or people in Europe, but open source is absolutely anathema here. It's seen as insecure, unstable, and unreliable.
I work in IT so I've tangentially worked across a number of sectors supporting their stacks and it's pervasive within the American culture. There is a major de-prioritization of in-house IT knowledge and sysadmins in favor of enterprise support contracts. When shit hits the fan, it's less important to have a knowledgeable team and more important to have a foot to stamp down on until the issue is resolved. Often that foot has another foot that stamps down, onward and onward until someone manages to engage the MSP or cloud provider that set the service up initially with their scant documentation.
It's a nightmare both for tech workers and from a cyber security perspective. A lot of this contains my own personal bias and perspective on the matters, but let me say, I have stared into the void and I can't stop screaming.
I think one of my favorite examples was using simple salt to trap them within the confines of white lines that they didn't think they could cross over. I really appreciate the imagery of using salt circles to entrap the robotic demons ...
No, I get it. There's this unspoken understanding that barcodes are strictly utilitarian and unobserved as their nature. In stylizing them, there's an acknowledgement of being unexpectedly seen by the human consumer and not the intended digital scanning device.
Yeah, sometimes I'm just standing in the shower in the morning planning out my day and I think to myself, "I should attack Ukraine." /s
Not quite, but this did lead me to my answer, thank you.
Very confusingly, EmulationStation and ES-DE are more distinct now than you might suspect, this is a problem I keep running up against. I found my answer in the ES-DE documentation for Steam Deck/SteamOS, https://emudeck.github.io/tools/steamos/es-de/#es-de-folder-locations (note that EmulationStation uses .cfg in the format of XML I guess whereas ES-DE uses .xml files directly)
The solution was to take my currently working /usr/share/es-de/resources/systems/linux/es_systems.xml file and copy it to ~/ES-DE/custom_systems and now it looks like the AppImage has fully picked up all my systems and configurations from the AUR install so I can safely switch over. I'd still like to resolve the AUR issues, but we'll treat that separately, I'm just happy to have a working solution right now 😊
Sorry, to clarify, the AppImage resolves the original audio/video stuttering and crashing issue. However I'm unable to modify the es_systems.xml configuration file to point to my pre-configured ROM directories.
It appears as if the original issue is present with the AUR package when using both X11 and Wayland, though I primarily use Wayland.
Good call, AppImage works (https://www.es-de.org/) although I have a few reservations before switching over to this solution. I've updated the post with more information.
EmulationStation Desktop Edition (ES-DE) crashing after brief use, video previews laggy and stuttering
2nd UPDATE: To anyone confused by this issue like I've become, there's a difference between EmulationStation and ES-DE,
https://www.reddit.com/r/emulationstation/comments/1ax92io/what_is_emulation_station_de/
EmulationStation (not DE) is an old frontend that got footing when it was used as the primary interface for RetroPie, a retro gaming operating system for Raspberry Pis. It hasn't been updated in a very long time; the last commit to main happened 6 years ago and the last release was in 2014.
EmulationStation got forked by a few different developers for their own projects; batocera-emulationstation is the fork used in Batocera OS, for example.
ES-DE is a fork of EmulationStation started by an independent developer (Leon Styhre) to be used as a general-purpose frontend. It brought a lot of quality of life features including automatic emulator scanning (which is what makes the front-end work out-of-the-box on your machine) and a pretty excellent themes engine. It's not affi
It is unclear, however, if the federal employee violated any laws by refusing entry. While members of Congress do have an oversight role over federal agencies, that power is typically exercised through hearings and enforcement of policies.
And while the Constitution grants Congress the power to establish federal government offices, it is unclear whether individual members are granted unfettered access to those buildings.
NYT got that boot ALL the way down their gullet.
Let's see what's up on the site now ... https://www.kohney.com/comic/rat-problem-pt2/
I stand by my statement.
The Other End has been becoming one of my favorite webcomics for awhile now. Every time I start reading a strip I have no idea where it's going and it's usually terrifying. A+
Hey, fair. I know the overall political left has always been plagued with infighting and purity testing. I'd like to at least do my part in bridging the gap between leftists and liberals by not getting in your face about not panicking over this shit if you'll still allow me the same space to entertain my concern without calling me hysterical. Deal?
There have been growing criticisms of him coming from the left for a bit now on how some of his tendencies to diffuse situations learns more towards liberalism than leftism. This isn't an outright attack on him or to say he's moving rightward overall. I need to watch this video again but I think this is the one that touches on a bunch of the points, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hCxHvogsTY
From a comment on the video, "Jon Stewart made me a liberal as a child, adulthood made me a leftist."
If you like Jon Stewart I'm not trying to say you shouldn't. But as someone who has continually been moving left, I do feel more distance from him than I used to is all.
After everything, I do still generally respect and like Jon Stewart, but even I found his piece this week on the Daily Show to be some real weak ass shit. I try my best to keep ahold of myself, not run away too much with assumptions or conspiratorial thinking. But you don't have to wait for them to do 100% fascist shit to start calling them fascists.
The White House defended the firing of Fong and the other inspectors general, saying “these rogue, partisan bureaucrats … have been relieved of their duties in order to make room for qualified individuals who will uphold the rule of law and protect Democracy.”
This. This right here. They are screaming their intent at us and we don't need to wait for them to do it to respectably call them fascists. Like to be clear I guess he can do this but the way he did it is potentially incorrect? Regardless, that's not what I want to hear you say when you do it to a 22-year veteran of the department.
Build old RetroArch MAME cores for ARM64?
I've got a real pain of a problem here and I'm looking for some outside opinions on the best way to resolve it, here goes:
Recently purchased an R36S Retro Handheld (https://r36sgameconsole.com/) and installed Rocknix (https://rocknix.org/) on it. When loading arcade games in RetroArch (1.20.0) the core it's using is MAME(0.273 (unknown)). My MAME collection is 0.256 (downloaded from Internet Archive once upon a time). Everything is already scraped, I would like to avoid downloading an entire new collection to work with the 0.273 core. What's the best course of action here?
Something else I'm not considering? I know there's historical reasons for why MAME is managed like this, but in 2025 this seems untenable.
Streaming on Linux
Can someone help me figure out what it even is I'm trying to do? I'm a tech savvy kinda persons and if someone just gives me the general idea/right keywords to search for I can probably figure the rest out myself, but I'm caught in a real X/Y problem.
JUNK: Arch, KDE (X11), 3080 (proprietary drivers), OBS, Elgato HD60 X, 3440x1440 ultra widescreen
I just want to do some simple streaming to Twitch/Youtube and game recording.
The Elgato obviously doesn't support my ultrawide so my original thought was to leave the UW monitor plugged in with DisplayPort (as it already is) and then plug in the Elgato with HDMI and then switch the monitor input when I'm ready to stream. The UW stretches the 2560x1440 out though, how do I configure the viewport to keep the proper aspect ratio and put black bars on the side? Alternatively, can I configure the UW to 2560x1440 with black bars and simply mirror the display, or will I take a performance hit when streaming like that? And how do I change the
87% Missing: the Disappearance of Classic Video Games
New study reveals most classic video games are completely unavailable