Showing headlines posted by eldersnake
« Previous ( 1 ... 2 3 4 5 6 7 )Humble Indie Bundle X Adds 3 More Games
As we come to expect from the Humble Indie Bundles, with around 6 days remaining, another 3 games have been added to the latest Bundle for those paying above the average purchase price.
Kobo Aura HD eReader is Linux-friendly
Having recently received a Kobo Aura HD eReader for Christmas, I was very pleasantly surprised to see how friendly the device was towards my Linux operating system.
While Kobo do not specifically actually mention Linux anywhere on their site or in the included instruction booklet, the device behaves in a operating system agnostic way - which in my opinion, is the right way.
While Kobo do not specifically actually mention Linux anywhere on their site or in the included instruction booklet, the device behaves in a operating system agnostic way - which in my opinion, is the right way.
Humble Bundle Android 8 Adds 3 More Games
With now a bit less than 6 days remaining the Humble Bundle Android 8 has now added another (Linux compatible) 3 games! As of writing, the average purchase price sits around $4.36, so if you haven't already picked up the Bundle, paying more than that average would net you the original 6 games plus the newly added 3.
Enlightenment DR 0.18 Released
Just one year after the long-time coming official release of Enlightenment 0.17 (E17), Enlightenment 0.18 has been released!
The new release features 242 individual changes and a host of new features and bug fixes. One of the more interesting changes is the the compositor has now been merged into core and is no longer optional (ie. be toggled on and off).
The new release features 242 individual changes and a host of new features and bug fixes. One of the more interesting changes is the the compositor has now been merged into core and is no longer optional (ie. be toggled on and off).
Opinion: Steam and DRM
DRM (Digital Rights Management) is often thought of as, well, a naughty concept. Especially amongst GNU/Linux users, as many often think about their freedoms and openness.
With this in mind, Valve's Steam has been around on Linux for a bit over a year now and I've often noticed, on various Linux-related sites (especially those to do with gaming), the different ways that Linux users react to Valve's digital distribution service.