

Maybe Steam could just bundle the needed 32 bit libs for Fedora until they can get a 64 bit only version ready.
Maybe Steam could just bundle the needed 32 bit libs for Fedora until they can get a 64 bit only version ready.
I would much rather have a slide out keyboard.
It’s working fine here. Are you sure you didn’t get a fake version of the site?
Because it’s using neon bulbs and they require a fairly high voltage to turn on.
Edit from MS-DOS still came with Windows XP and I think it was in 7 too. Did they remove it in later versions?
That would be over 19 tonnes. It would go through the floor and sink partway into the ground.
Install RetroPie and turn it into a game console. It’s got plenty of power to emulate a lot of older consoles. You can even connect some game controllers from old consoles to the GPIO pins.
The only real solution is to always keep your source files. PDFs are not intended to be edited.
I just keep all of my music in an NFS share on my NAS and play it with Rhythmbox or VLC. I keep a compressed copy on the SD card in my phone to listen to when I’m not home.
I ran Damn Small Linux on it about 15 years ago. That worked pretty well and it would even run a web browser. It would probably boot Tiny Core Linux, but there wouldn’t be much RAM left to run any programs. The motherboard supports 128MB, but it’s not really worth the cost to upgrade it though.
I may see about resurrecting that computer. I’ve got an old Motorola police radio that I would like to reprogram to operate in the 2M ham band and I think that PC will run the programming software.
Don’t install their apps either unless it’s on an old phone that you’ve wiped all of your personal data from.
That’s what I’ve been using lately. It prints great at 300 mm/s. It’s reasonably strong and doesn’t string much as long as it’s dry.
It’s certainly not an ideal solution, but it’s an option that will usually work.
I’ve used Optar. It works a lot better than just printing some QR codes. It fits 188 KiB on a sheet of letter sized paper after error correction. It does require a laser printer and a flat bed scanner though.
There are HDMI splitter boxes you can get from China that conveniently strip out the HDCP.
He should hook that control panel up to an emulator and make it work again.
If you only need 2D, there is LibreCAD.
I’ve run Linux on a 166MHz Pentium with 64MB of RAM. There’s not much modern software that will run on that hardware though.
At least with TV, you could tape your shows and fast forward through the commercials.
My watch runs for years from a coin cell. There’s no way that I’m replacing it with an internet connected spy device that constantly needs to be charged.