<mint just works, y’all jokes>
<mint just works, y’all jokes>
Worth removing the full stop as it messes with the second URL.
It is the same, but I appreciate it may not seen that way. It is to do with how it is designed. If you cut a tree block, leaves around it are converted to orphans. Orphans decay.
Historically all leaf would consider decaying and performance wise in leafy areas, it was horrific, so it was changed to this. It seems the leafs aren’t correctly orphaned when the tree was cut. If you press debug (f5), you can see the technical name of the node you’re pointing at. If you cut tree, it changes to the leafname_orphan. These can decay. My assumption is the ones not decaying were not orphaned and won’t have orphan in their technical name.
We have a bug for this but it hasn’t been picked up yet. The project is made by volunteers so can never guarantee what and when someone will work on something.
There is a PR open to decrease the aggressiveness of the fire burn. I will forward this to the dev who is working on this so they can take these points into consideration.
Thanks for raising the issue.
Beware. The Stalker is somewhat more dangerous and camoflages!
Have fun :)
I’ll be honest, and sorry in advance, but it’ll help you more. Your cynicism is probably the thing getting in the way. I understand it’s rough and not fun, but you’ve got to avoid it grinding you down.
You need to give yourself reasons to stand out. Making a half baked unfinished engine that no one uses isn’t as impresive as improving an existing one that people use. Greenfield projects are rare and you probably not going to get that as a first role. So you need to prove to employers you can take legacy code, learn it, understand it, improve it and get it live. Demonstrating you have the capability to do that on a FOSS project demonstrates you may be able to do that on an in-house engine. You also learn from the code others write. Why did they do it this way? Is it better? What are the pros and cons? Degrees differentiate, yes, but a green person out of uni vs someone who has proven they can do a similar job, you have an advantage. Plus, 5 PRS is probably easier than a new engine. Making one from scratch cannot hurt, but it doesn’t prove everything they need to know. Businesses hire because they have a problem and need someone competent to solve that problem. Tick those boxes and remove the risk and you have reasonable chances.
If you only demonstrate you’re not comfortable going out of your comfort zone and getting your hands dirty, you are not helping yourself.
So give them reasons to hire you, give yourself a chance, and keep applying. Give yourself a 2% chance, apply to 50 jobs, give yourself a 10% chance, apply for 10, but always go over the odds.
Remember, industry is rough right now. A lot of experienced proven folk got let go in last year. Might need to improve your odds and bide your time.
Maybe I got this wrong, how would you pronounce it?
Depends really. I say it this way, but talked to a Spanish speaker who said it was Lee-bree.
It’s a double edged sword. The channels are bridged across to Matrix, and the poll ran in multiple places, but 90%+ of the player community are on Discord.
Because MineClone2 is a dreadful name, and unfortunately, when ever anyone tries to differ anything slightly, a head can be taken clean off. The project doesn’t want to be a full clone, but heavily inspired by, but with it’s own direction. It needed to go.
Yup, that part is true. I guess the spawning logic didn’t get implemented for that.
Geodes can be found. If its in them, you can. If you change camera perspective and rotate, camera clips through wall and makes it easier to see geodes around you.
It’s not yet implemented. Added as a block so villagers can use it.
Something up to date with a newer kernel. Wine devs say that’s best to get updates and benefits quicker given how things are changing quickly.
Given that, I’d say Open Suse, Arch or Fedora. I use Open Suse and am very happy with it. Meets my indie gaming needs.
I have no idea. It’s quite subjective.
You can install packages and remove them and it resolves dependencies, just using different commands…
I think WINE recommend an up to date distro due to rapidly changing stuff needing up to date software and kernel. I think Debian wouldn’t be great for that. I’d personally recommend OpenSuse. Rolling, up to date and great with KDE. Good luck.
I would second up to date distros for the same reasons. I think the WINE guys suggested as much. I’d personally go OpenSuse as it’s rolling, up to date, solid and great for KDE.
Commenter so angry it isn’t targeting all men, they have to make the point in comments.
At least we’re getting to a point where generalisation is decreasing.
Looks good.
I really like OpenSuse, but the setup and configuration wasn’t easy or straightforward. Manjaro had a superior way to setup partition for example. If they make this process smooth, it would really help folk experience a great OS that just works and is up to date.