

Also, he spelled Semitic wrong both times!
Also, he spelled Semitic wrong both times!
I see the sausage vendor is in town this week!
Shotgun: 12 gauge shells with 00 gauge (aka buck) shot size (smaller number is bigger) is the single most accessible shotgun shell in the states.
It’s also the most useful for home defense. Range is about 20-50 yards, maybe more if you change the choke out of your shotgun. The choke is a small metal tube that screws in on the business end of the barrel and adjusts the spread of the pellets. “Full choke” is the narrowest and “open choke” has the widest spread.
Ask your local gun shop for more info if seeking to purchase a home defense option.
If both h264 and hevc are stuttering using hardware decoding, something might be wrong. Try setting up Apollo or sunshine on your remote PC, and add Moonlight to your deck using the desktop App Store.
There are lots of guides online for how to install Moonlight and add it to your deck’s games list.
If that works smoothly with hardware decoding, then the problem is with remote play.
I wrote out the rest of this before rereading your post and want to put it out there for others:
If you’re having issues with hevc, switch back to h264.
Hevc is more computationally complex to encode/decode, so if you’re trying to do either with software, then it would be better to use the less compressed h264.
Network congestion over WiFi, as you pointed out, is often also a culprit.
What is your domicile like? An apartment with lots of nearby apartments? Freestanding house? WiFi congestion gets worse with more people using it.
If you have a dock, plug in an Ethernet cable to the dock and try streaming that way. Does it mitigate your stutter?
If so, turn down the bandwidth as much as you can and check (e.g 720p at 30 fps).
If it is that, buying a higher quality wifi access point may help.
Honestly, those are the most interesting builds to me. As an American, I’m waiting for tariffs to die before buying stuff of AliExpress, but one can hope.
They made it so server owners need a plex pass to stream to anyone outside the same LAN. Or the clients need to pay $2 a month if the server owner doesn’t have one
OnlyOffice local editors is probably the best drop in replacement for Microsoft office’s basic suite I have found. I’m a professional Linux user stuck in a company that depends on Microsoft products.
Doesn’t cover email, but is very good for everything else.
Can also edit PDF files, sort of. Doesn’t always format well on conversion from PDF to editable, but still workable in some cases
Aside from the fact that the best drivers are closed source, NVIDIA is killing it on Linux these days.
Source: me a professional Linux user and hobbyist Linux gamer.
Talk about double-fisting…
I felt this revulsion in my bones. :shudder:
Yarr, matey.
I can hear this in my head. Snoop is amazing