Glad to see some work being done on Plasma Bigscreen, I recently discussed TV UIs a bit with a friend of mine who currently does a lot of their gaming on a TV and will probably switch that computer to Linux when Windows 10 support ends.
Diving into Plasma Bigscreen - Lemmy.World
Lemmy
How do you turn down the volume of the volume control sound?
https://lemmy.world/post/32220934
How do you turn down the volume of the volume control sound? - Lemmy.World
I just updated to Plasma 6.4.1 (from 6.3.5) on OpenSUSE TW, and it automatically
applied the Ocean sound theme. This included a new sound when changing the
volume, which is fine, but it’s way louder and hurts my ears when using
headphones, which is less fine (I have some sensory issues which may be
related). I’ve figured out how to disable it, but is there a way to just turn it
down? For now I’ve gone back to the FreeDesktop sounds (which has the much more
pleasant to me popping sound) but I’d like to try out the Ocean sound theme
without hurting my ears or disabling the volume control audio feedback.
That’s fair, but I’m by that accounting it’s probably better to say that when you buy something for $10, $1 goes to the worker, $1 goes to the company, and $8 goes to other companies who then pay their workers, etc.
Of course they exist, but they’re likely not factored in to the cost of the good you’re purchasing. The worker isn’t going to make any more money if you buy a product. (Unless there’s a commission, I suppose)
When you buy something from a big corporation, unless you’re tipping (and frequently even if you are tipping) usually $0 goes to the workers. It all goes to the company.
Or “Invasion of Privacy” Policy
If I’m reading the merge correctly, the Wayland bugs aren’t fixed, PCSX2 just added enough workarounds to consider things working.
That just incentives devs to just push out whatever mess they currently have and say the game is released, and they’ll do it unless Valve wants to start moderating game again. At least right now the abandoned games are still labelled early access.
Steam is a massive worldwide market, and the Steam Deck isn’t offered everywhere. Chinese users for example have to import it, so not many are used there.