Bastion, Beyond Good & Evil, Prince of Persia: Warrior Within, Mirror’s Edge.
and Hades, although I refuse to call it a “patient gamer” game
Bastion, Beyond Good & Evil, Prince of Persia: Warrior Within, Mirror’s Edge.
and Hades, although I refuse to call it a “patient gamer” game
Owncast https://owncast.online/
concept art of Instagram as polaroid.
so… polaroid?
if you use Android’s built-in setting to set up DNS instead of using an app that uses the VPN slot, you might have more success.
also, you might want toggling “block connections without VPN” off in system settings, I had to disable it when using KDE Connect with Mullvad.
inb4 “ackshully…”
hella wicked
did you type it out on a T9 keyboard?
tablets (especially ones that could be flashed with Linux, i.e. not iPads) are way less common than smartphones, so you get fewer devices to choose from for testing, fewer users who can run it, report bugs, and support the project, and less interest in general.
Which additional platforms are supported? Bitchute Rumble
ugh no I’m good thanks
that’s how extremely important it is
oh no it’s everywhere
Windows games on Linux software and Apple hardware. what a time to be alive!
it’s the opposite, actually: she got harassed because she didn’t talk about it when talking about creating a bootable drive.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transit_map#History
The mapping of transit systems was at first generally geographically accurate, but abstract route-maps of individual lines (usually displayed inside the carriages) can be traced back as early as 1908 (London’s District line), and certainly there are examples from European and American railroad cartography as early as the 1890s where geographical features have been removed and the routes of lines have been artificially straightened out. But it was George Dow of the London and North Eastern Railway who was the first to launch a diagrammatic representation of an entire rail transport network (in 1929); his work is seen by historians of the subject as being part of the inspiration for Harry Beck when he launched his iconic London Underground map in 1933.
After this pioneering work, many transit authorities worldwide imitated the diagrammatic look for their own networks, some while continuing to also publish hybrid versions that were geographically accurate.
they don’t completely disappear, but they do die and shrivel up.
if I had to guess, it’s probably somehow related to how everyone uses Google’s standard for public transport feed. I just use a separate transit app that covers bajillion of different cities in my country and lets me buy tickets without using Google Pay.
Organic Maps is testing public transport navigation, by the way, but it’s not available in released builds yet: https://github.com/organicmaps/organicmaps/blob/master/docs/EXPERIMENTAL_PUBLIC_TRANSPORT_SUPPORT.md
shut up shut up shut up shut up shut up