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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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SGDBoop
A program used for applying custom artwork to Steam, using SteamGridDB. Supports both Windows and Linux, written completely in C.
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So I found that using a pre-existing modlist was the way to go. I stumbled upon Skyrim: Journey, downloadable via Wabbajack, a tool which will handle the downloads for me. The “Journey” modlist promises to be “A lightweight modlist designed to act as a cohesive gameplay and graphical overhaul to play an improved Skyrim that looks and runs beautifully.”. Here I will retrace my steps in a brief form to hopefully help out some impatient gamers who just wanna play an optimized Skyrim mod on their everything-is-possible handheld. I would say you need about 1-2 dedicated hours for reading and config and about 8-16 hours for downloading/moving files.
Use SGDBoop https://www.steamgriddb.com/boop to find nice artwork for your non-steam game. The thing is a bit buggy, but the console command “systemctl restart --user xdg-desktop-portal” worked for me.
Follow this fantastic guide: https://github.com/Omni-guides/Skyrim-Wabbajack_Modlist-Linux It’s very verbose, but comes down to a few simple steps (Disable ENB, use Steam Redirector, add to Steam, set Mod Organizer 2 (MO2) paths, add 2 DLLs via Protontricks)
Wabbajack will download hundreds of mods from Nexusgames. You won’t want to manually click each time (you would go crazy), purchase either Premium or use my workaround: Download AutoHotKey (https://www.autohotkey.com/) automation software, install and then create a new file anywhere you like and name it e.g. autoclicker.ahk, edit with Notepad and insert: