Photoshop CS6 tutorial showing how to create the look of a leather-bound book cover adorned with custom, gold leaf text and ...
Photoshop cc 2015 tutorial showing how to create simple, but powerful 3-D text with deep, dramatic shadows. If your 3-D &/or ...
Android is the most popular operating system for smartphones. But what if you want to try Android OS on a Windows PC or laptop? Whether you want to play an Android game on a Windows PC or use your ...
OpenMediaVault 8, or OMV8 for shorts, codenamed “Synchrony” has been released, now supporting only 64-bit architectures (AMD64 and ARM64), and dropping 32-bit systems based on the i386, armel, and ...
While most users won’t notice a thing, Valve is finally retiring 32-bit compatibility for good. As of a recent client update, Steam now runs natively as a 64-bit application on modern Windows 10 and ...
Valve has officially released a new Steam client December update that quietly changes how the app runs on Windows. Starting on December 19, Steam now operates as a 64-bit client on Windows 10 and ...
Valve is ceasing Steam support for systems running 32-bit versions of the Windows 10 operating system (OS) on January 1, 2026. In a recent Steam Support blog, Valve explained that Windows 10 32-bit is ...
So, you’re looking to get ChatGPT on your Windows 10 PC, specifically the 64-bit version? It’s not as complicated as it might seem. Lots of people are talking about this AI tool, and for good reason.
Dates and times stored in 32 bits on Unix-like systems will “overflow” in early 2038 — but the problems, and the patches, start now. Patch early, patch often, they say — almost 13 years early in the ...
The big picture: On January 19, 2038, at 03:14:07 UTC, certain Unix-based computer systems will encounter a critical timekeeping failure. Due to a software flaw known as the "Y2K38 bug," 32-bit ...
Names have been reserved for VIP players, and the new Lord of the Rings Online 64-bit servers are scheduled to launch in just a few hours at 1 PM EST today. Sounds great, doesn't it? There's one ...