With Plex you can go to https://app.plex.tv from your work computer and steam from your browser. That said, if you can install software, Plexamp is a great way to listen to and rediscover your music.
With Plex you can go to https://app.plex.tv from your work computer and steam from your browser. That said, if you can install software, Plexamp is a great way to listen to and rediscover your music.
I’m glad to see there is now a free version of Plex Amp. This is, by far, my favorite way to stream my music library.
If you stream games or play multiplayer you may want to consider disabling that anyway as it dramatically improves the WIFI speed and reliability.
Most of the time it’s pretty simple to play non-Steam games. It’s made even better with Decky and SteamGridDB.
In a similar vain, enabling ssh and using that for config or moving files around has saved me a lot of typing.
My understanding is many SD cards have sub-optimal wear leveling compared with SSDs so there may be more to it than just writes per sector.
If it helps, I took mine apart this last weekend with no issues whatsoever.
No typo. I had my games on a 1TB microSD card and now they are on a 2TB SSD.
SanDisk 1TB Extreme microSDXC UHS-I. I play a lot of Diablo IV and Forza Horizon 5 and the loading screens are much faster.
My observation is that the SD card tops out around 30mb/s.
I did this for a while until recently I put in a 2TB SSD and the performance difference is night and day.
I at least suspect there will be a community porting some variant of SteamOS to the more popular handhelds.
Sometimes I’ll find myself streaming the Xbox or PS5 on the couch in front of the TV with it turned off.
Before I got a Deck I thought the hype could not be real. It’s over a year later and I still can’t put it down.
Not only does it work well for Steam games, it’s also really convenient for streaming PlayStation and Xbox games.
Diablo IV runs really well on the Steam Deck.
Advanced data protection is across your entire account, not per device. According to Apple’s documentation they rotate the keys locally on your devices and then delete them from their services so they no longer have a key to give.
That sounds like a good description of half the mobile games.
I wonder who owns the content posted on Lemmy. I haven’t seen it explicitly called out as Creative Commons or any other license.
I find debuggers are used a lot more on confusing legacy code.
Lately, monitoring tools such as OpenTelemetry have replaced a lot of my use of profilers.
I use Steam + Proton in an LXC so I can share the graphics card among several other containers. It works quite well with streaming once I got it set up.