I’ve been using AVR for VR fairly successfully recently on Linux. I’m not massive on VR but it’s a much better experience than quest native, other than very slow load times.
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Cake day: July 2nd, 2023
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ThanksForAllTheFish@sh.itjust.worksto Technology@lemmy.world•*Permanently Deleted*English1·2 months agoIs it self hosted or do you pay someone else to host it? Do you have a fixed IP? I’ve always wanted to try and set it up but it definitely seems like one of the riskier ones if you then use it to sign up to a lot of things.
Awesome thanks! Has mine! Hopefully someone does similar for the NZXT Kraken Elite display, but I can live with the large temperature number.
Link? I have some rgb ram I’m waiting on something like this for. Happy to donate!
ThanksForAllTheFish@sh.itjust.worksto Linux@lemmy.ml•What's a unique customization on your Linux machine you think no one else has?11·6 months agoCTRL+SHIFT+L to sync my room lights to the screen using huenicorn. Plan on hooking up openrgb as well when I can be bothered to write a script.
Try a mesh VPN and SSH would be my advice
So it’s an app on Linux which you can get from github, and then an app on the Quest store. And it works by loading up the app on the Quest and streaming it all to there. Just AVR on the store, made by the same people as the GitHub. There’s guides online and it might be a bit fiddly if you’re not good with Linux. It still seems like a work in progress and you’ll need strong WiFi.