nothing, as the OSX version is still 32bit.
nothing, as the OSX version is still 32bit.
pretty sure anything other than gmod (and strata games) is still 32bit, even with the vulkan renderer support
last we checked they preserved the tracker links bing themselves would use on results, which you had to opt out of.
doesn’t duckduckgo do the same thing at this point with tracker links? it also uses bing
surprised windows 11 is even capable of rendering borders, but yeah that’s pretty much what’s happening here, looks similar to on 10 when using a theme with borders. I guess whatever is done to hide the borders when maximizing still works, but it showing the borders while not maximized somehow happens despite the theme not being built for it (maybe an issue with DWM?)
Wouldn’t that be changing the corresponding color entries in the colorscheme? At least all of Plasma 5’s window decorations seem to respect those. Stuff like selection color’s already changed so it doesn’t seem too difficult?
Only on Valve’s official servers. Everywhere else is safe from those.
We quickly checked on our side, the two times we’ve opened the game recently, both local server and a community server had the items server working. So I’m not sure if it’s a Casual specific issue or not.
Aww, missed opportunity to use the Active Titlebar and Active Titlebar Secondary colors… also it fails to do the whole “shove cursor in top right corner when maximized” thing…
Also, yes. They’ve been doing this for over a decade now.
There is a CSS tweak by the person behind Classic Theme Restorer that can swap those two back around.
I’m pretty sure WinBTRFS’s readme has a section about properly setting up the user and group permission stuff. Essentially just providing the Windows UUID to Linux POSIX equivilant, which generally ends up fixing all the permission related problems. The only real caveat is it not working with SuperFetch, so files aren’t cached in memory and have to be loaded from disk with every read.
At least for us, notifications aren’t something you can really glance at similarly to app indicators. They’re usually text heavy, only really work for longer tasks for readability (which syncing usually isn’t), and are always obscured behind another popup for persistent notifications. Persistent notifications also take up more space within the notifications popup, rather than a small icon that you can easily glance at to know what’s happening.
As for programs not staying in the task manager, they usually take up less space if open as an app indicator, being able to be passively open but not take up as much space.