Right, SuperTux is a bit more demanding. ;) I'd bet it would run much better
if you ran it without OpenGL, though. You can do that like this if you're
interested in checking that:
supertux2 --renderer sdl
I don't know how the speed of the A20 compares to the Pentium 4, but my mom
has a
I may just return because debian has issues with certain things that trisquel
doesn't...
also, abrowser I noticed was updated recently, to ver 47...
but also, I gave up on trisquel almost too soon...
I still had one computer on trisquel right? well both will return to it very
soon...
Thank you, Rubén!
As promised I have donated $50 to the Trisquel project for this update.
Will anyone join me?
Even if you can't do $50 please consider setting some amount that you can
afford and join in. Long live Trisquel!
yeah perfect - no that works great, editing with tiled is really quick and
responsive. i just wanted some kind of example to run that was a bit more
complex than a couple of rectangles: it's clearly responsive. Supertux on
the other hand was not... :)
Debian doesn't have the "Universe"/"Multiverse" distinction. Only main,
non-free, and contrib.
You mean of maps to load in Tiled or other non-game programs that use OpenGL?
If you mean Tiled (TMX) maps, you could try level.tmx and map.tmx under
examples/data in xsge_tmx:
http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/xsge/xsge_tmx/1.0/xsge_tmx-1.0.tar.gz
If you mean programs other than
A brief update today, but about a large piece of work: the helper script for
the Trisquel 8 linux-libre kernel is ready!
The commit is
https://devel.trisquel.info/trisquel/package-helpers/commit/302c7ddf86a858cbfd76b1560e754de94714fb8b
It would be the last package needing manual building,
> Um, Since there are so many things to disable, the question I'm asking
myself not-so-sarcastically is: what's to leave enabled?
A lot. The list is huge. In the attachment my prefs.js to give you the idea.
I purged the irrelevant lines. There is an addon to disable the main crap
though
Um, Since there are so many things to disable, the question I'm asking myself
not-so-sarcastically is: what's to leave enabled?
Like, the minimum functional stuff?
Of course, there's still the problem of having too much of a specific
footprint and thus standing out.
ok so not a game, at all - a map editor. ok gimme a mo
Thanks, looks like one solid way to figure things out. I'll also try to
figure out how Debian deals with that (does it have a Universe repo, does it
have security updates, what's the point of the Universe repo, etc.)
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/aug/02/battery-status-indicators-tracking-online
To disable the HTML5 battery status API in Firefox/Abrowser/IceCat, change
dom.battery.enabled to false.
The only problem I'm having now is with my Toutatis 64 bit install, but that
may be because I have it on an IDE drive.
I'll give it another try when I can afford to clonezilla it over to a SATA
drive if I don't lose interest before then.
+1
tonlee we're getting this question a lot, let me refer you to the arm-netbook
archives answer:
http://lists.phcomp.co.uk/pipermail/arm-netbook/2016-August/011499.html
basically, i suggest focussing on helping with the campaign.
http://www.mapeditor.org
can't find tiled but am going to try freedoom... :)
Hello everybody.
I've managed to solve the problem. Apparently the problem were in the .json
file that I had. I experiment going to the other linux (mint) machine that I
have and getting a new *.json file do the same as usual (bookmarks>Show all
bookmarks>Import and Backup>restore>chose
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