

Oh dang, do you just download and import into OSMand?
Dive into the Fediverse.
Oh dang, do you just download and import into OSMand?
Magic Earth. I’ve tried every other major OSM google maps alternative and none have been as good as Magic Earth.
Osmand, Maps.me, Organic maps, and one other I can’t remember now, used them all. I still use Osmand because I’m trying to support the project, but Magic Earth by far has the best address searching, best UI, best directions, and limited but existing live traffic data to help you avoid really bad backups.
Now I’m in the USA, and some folks say some of these apps work better in Europe, that’s fair, but that’s still my point, Magic Earth. Not FOSS, but privacy respecting and uses OSM data. If you wanna break away from Google but aren’t willing to deal with a bunch of jank, Magic Earth is your friend.
Looks awesome! I swear, modding the Steam Deck is my kryptonite lol.
100% I haven’t been interested in handheld gaming since I was a pre-teen. Steam Deck got me back into it and I love it!
Worth it 100% for me, I love mine. I didn’t think I would use it much, I honestly bought it initially to just support the project and help FOSS friendly hardware and software.
But once I started playing on it, I fell in love. I play lots of indie games and smaller studio games, like Brotato, Hollow Knight, Battle for Wesnoth, Core Keeper. I also installed RetroArch and play all of my favorite Game Boy games. I play Old School Runescape with my friend, some kart racing games, some fighting games.
I also have Jellyfin installed on there, so I use it docked to my TV as a box for streaming from my Jellyfin server to my TV for movie nights. Discord runs pretty well on it in the background, so it works well for group party games like Pummel Party with my friends. Also games like Table Top simulator to play DnD, and virtual board games.
Idk, it’s just a perfect device for me. Super moddable, repair friendly, FOSS friendly, powerful enough to play most games without issue, works with every kind of Bluetooth device I’ve tested it with, controllers, headphones, etc. And now that it’s been out for well over a year, all of the most severe and annoying bugs have been fixed, so the general experience is very smooth and stable.
Wayland is generally great. The only reason I’ve stuck with X11 is a few random bugs and issues that still aren’t solved in Wayland.
I’m planning on switching over to Wayland fully at the end of this year. Seems like every 6 months I try it and there are less issues than before.
Try them both, plenty of folks have no issues at all running Wayland right from the start, so give it a go and see what happens.
Part of the Capitalist mythos for sure, “if you’re not growing, you’re dying.” There’s a rejection of the idea that you could reach a healthy equilibrium of size and just remain there.
And because of the way the rest of the market works, it forces everybody to act like that or get beat out completely. Vicious feedback loops.
Sniff the air vent softly while playing an intense game. The heat creates a wonderful sweet, sort of electronic savory smell.
It’s really lovely. I sniff my Steam Deck air vent probably once or twice a week on average. Some weeks much more if it’s cold out.
It feels nice to lightly brush the tip of your nose across the ribs of the went while inhaling too :)
I love this platform!
Nobara on my main gaming PC, Mint on my laptop, Steam(Arch-base) on my Steam Deck. Virtual servers, mostly Ubuntu, but I play around with Alma, Rocky, Raw Debian, and Arch.
I also play around with random ones on my laptop. Mint is the current one, but I rotate distros for that device every 6-12 months.
Just did it, I’ll test it out over the coming weeks and see how it works, thanks!