I can't seem to find any article that tells me how to fix my problem. I've tried cleaning and rebuilding everything with no go. I've put together some free controls for the public to use and I want to make a VSIX file. Seems simple enough, so I go download the Visual Studio 2012 SDK and install it, create the VSIX according to this blog: http://timheuer.com/blog/archive/2012/03/07/creating-custom-controls-for-metro-style-apps.aspx exactly how he has it but when I try to compile the vsix project it says:
The target "PkgdefProjectOutputGroup" does not exist in the project. I'm tugging my hair out here this should not be this hard. I can manually move the files to the extensions folder for vs and get it to show up in VS and work with my projects why can't I create a VSIX file of it? So far googling that error retrieves no results.
I understand the position Valve is in with hardware pricing thanks to the AI bubble, but as others have said, this is DOA at this price point. There's no world in which a machine at that performance level is worth that price.
My girlfriend's a console gamer and after meeting me, wanted to try PC but wanted something she could use on her TV with a controller. The Steam Machine is basically tailor made for her, but only at what it would have cost before the hardware crisis. I took my old Lenovo Legion laptop with a Ryzen 5800H and a 3060 Mobile 8GB, put Bazzite on it and it does the same thing with the games she's interested in very well. She still likes the Steam Machine, but won't be touching it until component prices are back in the sane range.
I know Valve isn't a charity, but I don't know why they're not willing to at least partially subsidize this device or even take a loss on it during the component crisis, just to build some market share. Then again, the Steam Deck is also a complete ripoff at its current price and they can barely keep them in stock so...
RustDesk 1.4.8 by Razvan Serea
RustDesk is a fast, secure, and open-source remote desktop software designed for self-hosting, remote access, and IT support. It provides a privacy-focused alternative to TeamViewer and AnyDesk, offering full control over your data with minimal configuration.
The client is fully open source, while users have the option to choose between two server solutions: the Professional Server, a premium offering with advanced features available for purchase, and the Basic Server, a free and open-source alternative for those who prefer a self-hosted setup.
RustDesk features
Open-source & free remote desktop solution
Cross-platform compatibility – Works on Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, and Web
End-to-end encryption (E2EE) based on NaCl for secure connections
Peer-to-peer (P2P) connectivity for fast and private remote access
Self-hosting support – Own your data with easy deployment on your infrastructure
Supports VP8, VP9, AV1 (software) and H264, H265 (hardware) codecs for efficient streaming
Unattended access for remote management
File transfer & clipboard sharing
Multi-monitor support & remote printing
Low-latency & high-performance remote access
Session recording & chat functionality
Professional & Basic server options for flexible deployment
Lightweight & minimal resource usage
No third-party server dependency for privacy
No installation or admin privileges needed on Windows (elevate privileges locally or remotely on demand)
Easy installation & minimal configuration required
Custom branding & enterprise-level features available
RustDesk 1.4.8 changelog:
Added
Add Windows arm64 support #15139
Feature: Add monitor-switch buttons to remote toolbars #15342
Refact/privacy mode 1 multi monitors #15321
autocomplete online #15313
feat: theme logo #15268
Changes
refact: restart remote device, autoconnect #15290
refact(oidc): icon azure to microsoft #15278
Refact/printer driver default unchecked #15191
Revert "fix(iPad): keep touch gestures with external mouse" #15288
Fixes
fix Wayland→Wayland clipboard paste
fix(arm64-linux): fix CJK font rendering on flutter-elinux #15324
iOS: autocorrect/data detectors corrupt the server Key field (ID/Relay Server settings), making valid keys impossible (or very hard) to enter #15293
fix(ios): mouse mismatch #15339
fix(linux): reap leftover logind session procs on headless teardown #15337
Crash on startup (0xc0000409) / Fast Fail in librustdesk.dll on Windows 11 26H1 #15218
fix(clipboard): Windows DIB images, fill missing alpha #15296
Fix/generate py target injection #15248
Fix clipboard synchronization not fully disabled in View Only mode #15224
fix(keyboard): win, key, Pause #15351
Download: RustDesk 64-bit | MSI | 32-bit ~20.0 MB (Open Source)
Links: RustDesk Home Page | Other platforms | Screenshot
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Question
sathenzar
I can't seem to find any article that tells me how to fix my problem. I've tried cleaning and rebuilding everything with no go. I've put together some free controls for the public to use and I want to make a VSIX file. Seems simple enough, so I go download the Visual Studio 2012 SDK and install it, create the VSIX according to this blog: http://timheuer.com/blog/archive/2012/03/07/creating-custom-controls-for-metro-style-apps.aspx exactly how he has it but when I try to compile the vsix project it says:
The target "PkgdefProjectOutputGroup" does not exist in the project. I'm tugging my hair out here this should not be this hard. I can manually move the files to the extensions folder for vs and get it to show up in VS and work with my projects why can't I create a VSIX file of it? So far googling that error retrieves no results.
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