Have a look at lvra.gitlab.io. It should be possible to get the rift s mostly working.
Have a look at lvra.gitlab.io. It should be possible to get the rift s mostly working.
Theoretically yes, but it is probably not a good idea to use it for email since duckdns might not exist in a few years meaning you cannot log into services that used that email.
Most of the reputable TLDs like .net can be had for around 10USD a year from providers like Porkbun.
Back in my day John Deere let you FIX the tractors
I thought I would give Organic maps a go a few day ago and it’s really good. I really like how it extrudes building to give them volume, rather than most map apps rendering them flat.
The Lab and StardistXR can all take advantage of hand tracking and I think there are other hand tracking only games as well.
We will merge Horizon worlds and Gorilla Tag to create a more cohesive experience for our customers. This involves closing Gorilla Tag in favour of a new “Tag” experience is Horizon Worlds
-Meta, probably
There are some smart people that are making the rift-s work on linux using Monado. As I currently understand it, good 6dof controller tracking is the final roadblock to it being fully usable. LVRA wiki has more information about this kind of stuff.
At my school, mullvad is one of the only VPNs that work since basically every port is blocked except ports 80 and 443 using TCP. Mullvad can use wireguard over TCP on 443, which is very useful.
You could buy the same modem that is in the pinephone in mini pcie format and use a usb adaptor to connect it to a pi.
I think a project that uses the pi cm4 format and adds a modem, screen, buttons, speaker and bms to be a compelling open-source phone.
While I really want the pinephone to be good, I just could not use it for daily use given its extremely poor battery life. I ended up getting a oneplus 6 and running postmarketOS before switching to DivestOS for camera support. I might switch back given that updating packages is much easier on linux compared to android.
Linux Vr Adventures is a great place to find info related to VR on linux.
Tubular is a fork of Newpipe that adds sponsorblock which is really nice.
Don’t forget about the “personalised recommendations.”
Do keep in mind though that some extra packages are needed to use oneapi for things like blender or Stable Diffusion. Other than that arc works great for gaming and recording using OBS out of the box for me on Fedora.
The bridges in my area that go over the freeway do technically allow for bikes and they even have a painted lane, but it feels horrible biking there with cars going past at 80km/h in a lane skinnier than my bike handlebars.
In North America, I’ve never seen a bridge in my area be restricted from bicycles. I’ve only seen restrictions on the freeway.
https://lvra.gitlab.io is a great resource for pinux VR.
Framework makes laptops that are well supported and System76 desktops.
A tank.