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Resizable bar needs UEFI.
Resizable bar needs UEFI.
Bit how can we pollute if we use natural gas? It natural so it must be clean! /s
Just make sure your current computer supports resizable bar and that your os is UEFI booted and not BIOS booted. Also, the windows drivers are steaming garbage so it’s only worth it if you know you will only be using Linux.
Using Fedora, it’s plug and play for most things like games and general usage. I gets a bit harder when you want to use the raw compute of the card to run stable diffusion, blender or encode video, as you’ll need additional packages and config.
IIRC, recycled plastic is not only more expensive than new plastic, bit also of a lower grade. That is why there is no financial incentive to recycle.
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.
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.
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.
Games that use OpenVR instead of OpenXR will have issues, like Alyx and The Lab. And you need a separate program for boundaries and rebinding controls.
I’ve had enough issues with SteamVR and instead use an openXR runtime called Monado. The result is that I have always had working async reprojection. https://lvra.gitlab.io is a great resource for linux vr.
I’ve tried wireless PCVR on a quest 2 over wifi and it has always sucked due to high latency, compression artifacts and general connection instability. This was even with an ideal setup, using a dedicated 5GHZ router within line of sight.
Vrchat is available on quest headsets but they have their own independent policies and account, so it should not really be meta’s problem here.
Changing a yellow light for that reason is messed up in so many ways.
WSL maybe? Kinda funny that a major feature is literally just the ability to use linux within windows.
A tank.