Okay lol, my bad. I guess I have been living in an echo chamber when it comes to that game. Earth Defense Force. Love the series. You save the earth … by destroying it.
Okay lol, my bad. I guess I have been living in an echo chamber when it comes to that game. Earth Defense Force. Love the series. You save the earth … by destroying it.
My spine is already fucked by years of programming so no worries there mate.
Here you go: https://store.kde.org/p/1425082 Go into the file tab to get the images.
Okay had to dig into it but found it. It’s called Anurati font.
lol I guess you haven’t played EDF then?
Well the best thing about it is that she wouldn’t even touch linux before this. She’s primarily a mac user. But after I dragged her to see my desktop modifications, after 10 eye rolls, she said she could do much better job than me.
Hours later she was still at it, hairs scattered, baffled looking… saying how could someone live with so many choices lol.
The good thing out of this was that now she’s starting to see the point of linux after all these years.
Eh, let it fall. I have been wanting to replace that samsung 4k crap that looks worse than 1080p chinese monitors
Close. Army housing. It’s free so I am not complaining!
I always come back to OpenSuse Tumbleweed. Once I have everything setup, it’s stable as a rock and kde works really well on it.
As the other commentator stated, you’re looking for a FP.
The things you’re describing can be easily found… but they usually cost a lot to have all of the qualities at once.
That is unless you can get your hands on chinese FPs where you live. I get mine ftom aliexpress.
Now from my own personal experience you can’t go wrong with either Jinhao X159 or Jinhao Dadao 9019.
You can get a fine nib which I think is the perfect balance between smoothness and crispness.
Another tip: if you find that the feeling of the nib is not to your liking, you can tune the nib. There are many excellent tutorials for this and you can do it at home without special equipment.
Since money is a problem, you’ll probaly have to substitute it with your time in getting exactly what you want.
After going through a rabbit hole what I learned that this patch does is to allow time critical applications at top priority.
Most of popular linux distributions already have this patch applied in one form or another.
What I think it means for end user is that if applications use this part of linux kernel correctly, then they can speed up some core parts, be more responsive, and stable. But if it’s abused, it can end up slowing the whole system.
This reminds me of the time I got my first 160hz monitor. Games felt buttery smooth. Like there was some friction that I never thought was present was magically gone. Days later I found out that the monitor was set at a whooping 60Hz in the settings.
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Schrodinger’s Brain