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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: February 1st, 2025

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  • Well, I work with devops, so I am well aware of some of the benefits and limitations of VMs, and I also tried proton. But I’ve run in tons of issues when running older games that I like, specially mmos like Ragnarock Online, Perfect World, Prison Tale. They have lots of compatibility issues with the VM, even with windows 10 for that matter, which is a little easier to circumvent.

    About performance, things like baldurs gate 3 and cyberpunk 77 that I like, have like 20 to 25 less frames on proton, to add salt to injury bg3 crashes a lot.

    Your second paragraph tells me you haven’t even tried because the first part is just checking a checkbox in the steam

    Please don’t assume thinga on the internet, steam accounts for a quarter of my time spent on games.

    I’m not here to say which one is better, just saying that bashing a completely fine option is, at least, dumb.

    ^(edit: typo)


  • I see some comments trashing dual boot, I really don’t understand why. I have really nice setup with Debian 12 and Windows 10. Boot pc, get to work on Linux, and other projects after. When I’m done and want to game a bit I switch to windows.

    I have no need to setup funky VMs to bypass games made strictly for windows, and also don’t have performance limitations.

    Just use the right tool for the right job folks.









  • My dude, I’m just saying something based on my biochemistry degree, as I stated it’s harmless if you INGEST A TINY AMMOUNT ON ACCIDENT, you obviously shouldn’t eat it as part of your diet, and if possible use a cast iron or stainless steel pan, even though is harder to clean.

    I’m not talking about politics our corporations, or as you label it my “facts”, I’m talking about science and chemistry.





  • Not like it’s good to eat it or anything, but just to help with the worries, teflon is absolutely safe to ingest, it’s a very stable molecule that don’t interact with absolutely anything, it goes in and out basically intact. Of course it doesn’t mean you can EAT it, but ocasional accidental ingestion due “scraping the bottom” are pretty safe.

    When people say it’s Toxic, they knowing or unknowingly are talking about the chemicals used to make it, mostly PFOA — perfluorooctanoic acid. These are nasty, and are present GLOBALLY, like everywhere, from the sea to the middle of deserts and even on the poles, that also includes our blood.