I'm not actually sure it's particularly effective at stopping bots, considering how easy it is to spin up a docker container that can bypass it. Ironically FlareSolverr wasn't able to solve CAPTCHA so now with them gone it works even better.
ayaya
I love Inter. I use it on both my desktop and my phone. Not only is it super readable and looks really nice but it's actually open source which is relatively rare in the typeface world.
If you need to run a set of commands or a script with fish you can just toss them in a file and run bash file.sh
. I have been daily driving fish for years and I don't even have think about it.
As long as old.lemdro.id stays I am happy.
but the whole steam client? has always been vgui, not ~~electron~~ cef. just because there is reference to chromium in the commit log doesn't mean the whole thing's built in chromium.
The "whole client" hasn't been VGUI. Yes now every element is CEF but many, many pieces have been CEF for a very long time. "Switched over to Electron" implies it was entirely changed but it's just using more of the thing it was already using. Those are two different things.
it's not just me who has performance issues. at one point it was everyone on linux with an nvidia gpu
The issue you linked had nothing to do with Steam it was a bug with the Nvidia driver itself. Not sure what that's supposed to prove.
my point was that i never had issues with vgui, and now i do.
And my point is that is not an inherent problem with Steam, that is something specific to your configuration. If it runs fine for other people it can run fine for you. I'm on Arch with an Nvidia GPU. I have zero issues with the performance.
There is water at the bottom of the ocean
particularly now that steam has switched over to electron, so the client runs like shit
It uses CEF not Electron, which it has used for over 13 years. This isn't something they just added. If it's running slow for you you probably have an issue with hardware acceleration.
That has actually been added into the next release, although there is quite a lot of time between major releases.
I haven't played it myself (yet) but apparently Divinity Original Sin 2 was similar and the "Definitive Edition" that came about a year later fixed Act 3. So I hope the same thing happens for BG3.
Yeah, it's feasible to do that. And? My point was that you can't just rip out the web portion of an app and always expect it to work in a browser. That's it. What you said is irrelevant in the sense that it has no effect on whether the web portion can run in a browser or not.
It's also one of the funniest games I've ever played. There are so many moments where I fully burst out laughing. The game absolutely rules.