HomeKit-over-Thread and Matter-over-Thread has been pretty okay in my experience, using HomePods and an Apple TV 4K as the border routers. I'm using Home Assistant, and the HomePods control everything nicely. Setup is a little weird (you have to set up your devices in HomeKit first, remove and then add again in Home Assistant without resetting) but they work great. My only complaint is that HomePod Software and tvOS updates tend to bork the devices until I reboot HA, but that takes 10 ish seconds so not a big deal.
The game is marked as Deck Verified by Valve [1], which means someone at Valve will have tested it. More about how a game is marked as Deck Verified [2]
I could have sworn that deck verified was fully automated and I don't see clarification either way there, but regardless.
Your point emphasizes that this is Valve's problem and not the publishers. Valve is pushing an unsupported platform for games by saying it's "verified" when an update could easily break that (as evidence here). A developer is not likely to target an unsupported platform for testing.
Especially given:
"If you take no action, after approximately a week your review results will automatically be published and show up on your game detail page".
So that checkbox being on the Store page is not confirmation from the developer for supporting the platform.
Capcom have acknowledged that they will provide a hotfix in the near future to fix the issue [1]. Anecdotally, the newest Proton Experimental fixes the problem for me on my Steam Deck.
In the Netherlands at least you can reasonably assume it is compatible with your device when it says "Deck Verified" and can get either a fix or a refund within a reasonable amount of time (say, 2 weeks) from the place of purchase, I imagine similar countries have similar laws. So from such countries a letter or two should do the trick, but of course only a small percent of people who bothered reading the law know that and they probably don't teach law in middle school.
I follow ~200 extremely high quality people on twitter, never use the algorithmic timeline -- just the "Following" tab, and it is easily 10x more signal to noise than HN for me, I'm almost upset I didn't start using it sooner.
Only works if you can resist the temptation to follow national news orgs, politics, etc. In my little niche, though, I essentially never see any of that, even less than one sees on HN. It's all just tech, AL/ML, space/rockets, startups, etc.
I've completely stopped paying for streaming services (apart from Apple Music and TV+, because of Apple One). I pay $5 a month for Mullvad, and "acquire" everything I could ever want and play it using Plex on an old HP Elitedesk with OpenMediaVault installed on it. It's all automatic, so I request what I want using Overseerr, and it does the rest for me.
Do I feel a little bit bad for stealing content? Maybe. But I'm not paying for 4+ streaming services just so I can occasionally watch shows a few times a year.
Microsoft, why?? It's an easy fix sure (within the Microsoft 365 Apps admin center) but why is it so hard for you to respect people's default browser choice?
Even respecting the settings. Every time Windows gets an update it asks me if I want to change my Edge settings, the first couple of times I didn’t pay attention and it changed my default search engine and started showing the useless news thumbnails that I explicitly took the time to hide.
I’ll need to reconsider Chrome or Firefox, which is a shame since I really liked some Edge’s features.
Try brave browser?
The bitcoiny stuff can be hidden (and blocked). As for the rest, I'm remarkably impressed. I even go through the brave://flags for extra oomph. I rn it from a ramdrive, too.
> why is it so hard for you to respect people's default browser choice
Why should microsoft respect anyone if they don't have the self respect to use literally any other OS? They keep getting away with this shit, because people keep letting them.
If you choose to use Windows then I have no pity for you.
I'm currently using Time Machine for my Macs, running on a Debian box that runs OpenMediaVault. It's a pretty simple switch to enable Time Machine on a network share, and it seems to work fine.
I'm a pretty big supporter of Xbox (had every console they've so far released, heavy into Game Pass) and my god they need to get naming right. They should have called it the "Xbox 4" or something to make it simple.
Though, Microsoft is never one for making names simple.