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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • It doesn’t have VRR but it does have a configurable refresh rate. So e.g. if a game runs at a stable 40 fps you can run the display at 40 Hz too (or 80 Hz for the OLED model) and then you don’t get the uneven frame spacing you’d get from vsync with 40 fps on a 60 Hz display. With VRR the screen would also adjust to whatever frame rate the game produces even if it’s not stable, and the Deck doesn’t do that. But being able to get 40 fps with uniform frame timing instead of the 30 fps you’d have to use if the display was locked to 60 Hz (LCD model) or 90 Hz (OLED model) is a huge difference.





  • Swift is a modern language that offers good performance paired with a lot of safety features you’d otherwise go to Rust for (type safety, memory safety, concurrency safety,… although memory safety based on ARC is slower than Rust’s approach, and Swift makes it easier to disable safety features). Personally I like it more than Rust because the syntax is a bit cleaner and it has exceptions.

    The problem is, using it on e.g. Linux is a completely different experience from using it on Apple platforms and it doesn’t really transfer over. Apple devs will use Xcode and all the Apple tooling and will get used to Apple APIs. On Linux you don’t have Xcode, you rely more on Swift Package Manager for dependencies than on Apple platforms, you suddenly have to learn what part of the libraries you’ve been using are Swift standard library and what parts are Apple only or are from the Objective C runtime that’s not used on Linux, and the ecosystem is much smaller.

    A lot of things that also mean that code written for Apple doesn’t often work on Linux unchanged, not because of Swift as such, but e.g. before Swift had Regex you’d use the one from Objective C, which just works on Apple, but isn’t there on Linux.

    I haven’t tried it for Android development but I imagine it’ll have similar issues.


  • These are all forks of forks of the microblogging platform Misskey, so they tend to focus on their differences compared to other Misskey forks or Misskey itself. I don’t think it’s strange for people interested in the Fediverse to at least have heard of these. Misskey is older than Mastodon and it supported ActivityPub before e.g. Lemmy existed.