How is it compared to gsnap?
How is it compared to gsnap?
Have you tried converting those hours to seconds?
I picked up Tunic on the summer sale and am finishing that up.
The steam deck apu isn’t even top of the line.
Better than dry crust.
Imo it’s a little too cumbersome to comfortably play on the deck. Totally possible and it does work thanks to community controller presets but I feel limited playing on the deck compared to when I play on mouse and keyboard and a full size monitor.
I liked occasionally getting the Blu-ray as quality is much better than streaming. The real issue for me was the selection sucked and they never really rolled out 4k uhd discs.
Tendon after 6 or so hours simmering or 1 hour in a pressure cooker and you got my favorite pho add in.
Did you freehand the cuts or use the chopsticks/skewers assisted method?
Just opposite of the current position. Would only apply to views where thumbnails can be on one side of course (small, smaller, compact)
It would be nice to have a quick action to change thumbnails to the opposite side.
Artic is replacing that cooler with a newer model. Try to get a good deal on the previous version or swap to the new model.
Only the headphone jack crackle issue mentioned.
I’m not sure. Like I said, I never installed more than just the drivers from them when I had a Nvidia GPU. Just heard that whatever software they had wasn’t great.
It is not the drivers that dictate the fan but the GPU bios. So how the card behaves depends on how the manufacturer tuned it which is to say, these days it’ll work fine. Many “high end” cards usually have a bios switch for silent or turbo mode so whatever.
Back when I had a 1080ti, I used afterburner to set my own fan curve. And now with my rx6900xt I use AMD’s adrenaline because it actually works great for many things including setting a custom fan curve . I’ve heard Nvidia’s first party software was a bit of a mess for oc stuff so that’s why Afterburner became so popular but I never installed anything past Nvidia’s drivers so maybe it’s good now, who knows.
It depends more on how much time you want to spend on post processing and how detailed the part is. Teller layers means more time spent filling and smoothing.
You can print at .2 layer height with a .6 noz and benefit from a thicker line width, giving you stronger parts but the overall time to print will still be similar compared to a .4 noz.
If your options are limited, it might be helpful to list them.
Possibly some kind of taffy sort of candy
Did I hear a rock and stone?