You’re right, I edited my original comment to include advice on how to do this
You’re right, I edited my original comment to include advice on how to do this
That’s a nice feature, especially when gaming on Linux
If you know how to hack your switch, you should also know how to not get banned
That’s really cool, thanks
Be aware, however, Nintendo is aggressive with banning, so mod at your own risk.
Just block Nintendo servers when running modded to make sure you don’t get banned. This guide can help you: https://nh-server.github.io/switch-guide/extras/blocking_nintendo/
r/PiratedGames is the way to go for offline/single player games
For multiplayer games, I always try to get better deals on sites like Instant Gaming
Epic Games also offers paid titles for free, many of them are garbage though and I absolutely hate Epic Games
You can check if it’s on Deezer and use this guide to download it. The same is possible on Qobuz. Both offer FLACs.
Some Tailscale clients are open-source and you can self-host a Headscale server
Where there’s a will, there’s a way
uBlock Origin should prevent this, other ad-blockers might not have these bypass mechanisms.
You know that this is a piracy community, right?
2023, the year of Big Tech companies restricting their users in every single possible way. But why is 2023 not the year of users finally waking up and switching away from this proprietary garbage?
Back when I used macOS, I liked an app called SnippetsLab. Nowadays, I just throw them in Emacs Org files. Emacs is actually very handy for this, you get syntax highlighting in the code block, you can execute the code right from inside your Emacs environment and there’s even alpha support for lsp-mode inside of Org code blocks.
I second this. Navidrome is great and it can be used with any Subsonic-compatible client which makes it even more awesome.
I believe the limitation is introduced on the server side to prevent exactly this. You can use this guide to download or stream 320kbps MP3s and even FLACs from Deezer though. It’s genuine 320kbps, you can check it using a spectrum analyzer like spek. I used this to build up my collection of high quality music.
There is Last.fm, Libre.fm, as well as ListenBrainz.
I think this is a rhetorical question