...the only Linux distro simulation game in existence, and I'm inclined to believe such a claim.
In Linux Tycoon, players are tasked with fixing bugs, choosing software packages, and keeping file sizes low in a Linux distribution package that will be evalutated and rated by your peers. This is all handled in simple, management-focused gameplay that simulates the fun parts of building a distro, however -- no actual programming is involved.
Linux Tycoon is available for Linux and MacOS X, with a Windows version in the works. The game is currently in beta, and can be purchased directly from Lunduke's site for $4.
I don't know if it's a problem with my settings or something I screwed up, but does the text on GAF appear small to anyone else when they are using Chrome or Firefox?
I'm using Xubuntu and when I visit GAF, the text for posts and thread titles is smaller than usual, but the text for the navigation thing at the top (User CP, Subscriptions, etc) is normal.
Yea, it was small for me. In Firefox you can zoom a page in and out by holding down Ctrl and using the mouse wheel. If you want to zoom text only you have to temporarily enable the menu bar, then view>zoom and tick zoom text only. There's probably an easier way but that works for me. As long as you don't automatically delete site preferences when you close Firefox the changes will stick for each sub-domain you do it for, forever.I don't know if it's a problem with my settings or something I screwed up, but does the text on GAF appear small to anyone else when they are using Chrome or Firefox?
I'm using Xubuntu and when I visit GAF, the text for posts and thread titles is smaller than usual, but the text for the navigation thing at the top (User CP, Subscriptions, etc) is normal.
It's fine here. Firefox is probably using the gtk default settings, and Chrome uses whatever your desktop environment's default settings are, which in xfce's case is probably gtk's.
You could try running xfce4-settings-manager → Appearance → Fonts and increasing the size of the default font. That seems like it'd be pretty easy. I'd imagine that you already have this figured out, in fact.
Yea, it was small for me. In Firefox you can zoom a page in and out by holding down Ctrl and using the mouse wheel. If you want to zoom text only you have to temporarily enable the menu bar, then view>zoom and tick zoom text only. There's probably an easier way but that works for me. As long as you don't automatically delete site preferences when you close Firefox the changes will stick for each sub-domain you do it for, forever.
There's also a checkbox in preferences>content>fonts and colours>advanced that lets sites choose their own font settings. Unticking or ticking that can make a difference as well.
Tried all your suggestion and nothing seemed to increase the font for the posts text. I did notice, however, that it was a little bigger on Firefox. I'm honestly tempted now to try another distro and see if it will be different
Thanks for the help
Tried all your suggestion and nothing seemed to increase the font for the posts text. I did notice, however, that it was a little bigger on Firefox. I'm honestly tempted now to try another distro and see if it will be different
sudo apt-get install ttf-mscorefonts-installer
It doesn't work for me either.Do HTML 5 Youtube (video) pages crash on Google Chrome for anyone else?
It's not even a matter of once every couple times, it's every single time as soon as I open the page and the video begins to load. I get the "He's dead, Jim." page within seconds as the page begins to load, every time.
It doesn't work for me either.
Videos are working fine in Chromium for me. It's probably something Chrome specific.
Dev or beta channels?
Well, um, dev is supposed to be unstable dude.
I wonder why they'd put the Dev Channel in the Ubuntu Software Center?
Chromium is probably dev by default. Chrome is what's considered stable I suppose.
Dev.
18.0.1025.142 (Developer Build 129054 Linux) Ubuntu 11.10
Does anyone have a strange tint on certain YouTube videos? Started maybe a week ago.. Cant seem to find a legit solution to it. Using Ubuntu 11.10
18.0.1025.142 (Developer Build 0 Linux)
I'm using the same version but compiled on my own machine. Could be an ffmpeg related issue. Did the issue just start today?
Seeing blue people?
It's kind of funny, because everyone tells me not to worry about Flash being shit on videos because HTML 5 is the future, and the damn thing won't even work on Youtube.
(I'm going to check Firefox and Opera to see if this persists.)
Does anyone have a strange tint on certain YouTube videos? Started maybe a week ago.. Cant seem to find a legit solution to it. Using Ubuntu 11.10
Apparently, the Banner Saga guys are going to be porting the game to Linux at some point.
angelfly: Is that like, 11 total years @_@ That's impressive. I hadn't even heard of Caldera before. (though, I had heard of SCO... of course.....)
iznik: Out of curiosity, what kind of computer do you run Ubuntu on? I thought Unity used full screen applications by default. I thought that would be kind of annoying on a bigger monitor.
I've been running it on my Toshiba Satellite laptop. I could definitely see where it could be a problem on larger monitors.
So, out of curiosity, what's everyone's Linux history?
I used to run Unity on my netbook (10"?) and full screen applications make sense for that.
Not sure how big the satellite is, but I'm guessing a normal 14-15 inch laptop.
I would think, if they were smart, that they would change whether or not applications launch fullscreen or not based on the resolution. Maybe they already do. I actually heard that applications launch full screen in GNOME 3.4, as well.. :-/
-You can now pause the game (see that button in the top right? pause button. Revolutionary, right?)
-The Assign Workers view now shows the bug count for each package (so you dont need to hop back and forth between there and the Edit Packages view all the time).
-Events and messages are now displayed in a central area, with a scrollable history.
-You can set the icon for your Distro (right click on the tux icon and set that icon to whatever you like). 32 pixels by 32 pixels.
-A bit of a visual update throughout the game including new buttons that fit in better with the overall look and feel, and a new Main Menu when you first launch the game.
All of those are awesome.
But theres one more new goodie that is super awesome: Scenarios.
You can now build your own Linux Tycoon Scenario file that has your own list of packages and distros to play against (that completely replaces the built-in ones).
The possibilities are just plain awesome.
-Build a scenario that consists of real-world packages and real-world distros. Compete against Ubuntu, Fedora, OpenSuse and whatever else youd like! Heck, you could even mirror DistroWatchs list!
-Build a scenario where you compete against Windows, MacOS X and just for the heck of it lets say AmigaOS.
-Build a scenario that I havent even thought of yet that is so awesome my head explodes.
A Scenario is a simple XML file, that you can edit with any plain old text editor, with a .ltx extension (Linux Tycoon XML). The format is pretty simple to follow. See the Example.ltx file here for more information. If you have questions on this, dont hesitate to ask in the Linux Tycoon Forum.
And, because its a single file, you can share it with the world.
FACT: There is no better path to fame and glory than to create awesome Linux Tycoon Scenarios.
Just a reminder: Linux Tycoon is still Beta. Its a load of fun and being enjoyed by mobs of people around the world but there are still new features and new game-tweaks coming. If youd like to help shape the future of Linux Tycoon, the forum is the place to be.
So Chromium has been fucking up for me over the past few days (I mentioned some of the problems in this thread earlier), and I was thinking about downloading Chrome. I'm kind of against it because I thought the whole open-source part of Linux was great, but I guess it's not a huge deal.
My question is, I downloaded the .deb file of Chrome stable, and I'm about to install it through the software center, can I uninstall everything through there if everything doesn't work out, just as easily as I installed it? Also, does Google pack in any weird shit like Google Updater, like they do for the Windows version of Chrome?
I would think that as long as the hardware isn't too exotic, all would be pretty much the same.
I guess the only catch, in my experience, is networking and bluetooth.
So, whenever you buy a computer or something, I would just do a quick search to see how the particular network devices work in Linux.
anyone tried mosh yet? [ssh "improvements"] http://mosh.mit.edu/?#about