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d3Xt3r, in Intel or AMD for ffmpeg?

You can see the results for this here: openbenchmarking.org/…/x265&eval=3361398242e5…

Bankenstein, in Can anyone tell me what format this uh.. nested dictionary is?

It’s Lua.

megrania, in Video editor for Linux?

For whatever reason, many of the editors mentioned here never worked for me … like OpenShot, ShotCut or PiTiVi were really unstable the last time I tried (might be a distro or DE thing). Also I found it hard to cut precisely when they worked. Lightworks, Da Vinci, Cinelerra, I had a hard time getting them to run. Maybe that changed in the meantime.

I ultimately stuck with Kdenlive, which is stable enough and allows for reasonably precise cutting.

lemmyvore, in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

You don’t have to edit the config files, if that’s what you mean. Generally speaking you should never need to edit any of them except in very unusual cases.

The config files are generally specific to apps and they can get transferred between distributions.

It’s actually common practice to take your /home with you too a new distro, it to put it on a separate partition so it’s still there after you reinstall the system partition. The app versions might be a little different and sometimes they’re may be small glitches when you do that but for the most part it works very well.

The only dot dirs you might care about is .cache which you may want to empty every once in a while (if you run out of space on /home). There’s also trash, if you use that, but that usually has its own widget on the desktop so you can explore or empty it.

lily33,

Actually, there are many programs that are designed to be configured by editing the config files. It’s not a “very unusual” case.

shekau, in Vivaldi Is Available on Flathub – Brno Hat

I use Mull Browser from Mullvad as my primary browser, but before Mull Browser I’ve been using FF.

averyminya, in Is linux good for someone tech illererate.

Can you remember a password?

I tried helping someone with their steam deck and they got stuck because they didn’t know what they set their password to.

That aside, start with running Linux on a liveboot USB. It is very easy. See how it is for yourself and decide from there

HotChickenFeet,

In fairness, I frequently forgot my steamdeck root password, because the need to use it was so few and far between. If you’re always in game mode, then there’s almost 0 reason that I’d need my password.

averyminya,

I agree, but this was instantly. Like sub-10 minutes. . .

0ops,

Been there. Frustrating af

Discover5164, in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

i have a git bare repository in my home and use dotbare to manage it.

here you can find all of them github.com/simone-viozzi/my-dot-files

Pantherina, in Is linux good for someone tech illererate.

Yes just install something that never breaks, has a graphical appstore with the correct sources, and a good GUI.

I would say try Fedora Silverblue from Ublue.it. it updates automatically (at least it should), and all your apps can be installed from your software store.

rufus, (edited ) in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

If you use one of the standard graphical desktops (Gnome, KDE, …) you don’t need to explore all of the config files. The most important settings should be in a settings program.

And programs should (mostly) come with sane default settings anyways. Debian adds a few. So the usual way (for beginners) is to start with the defaults and change around stuff once you want to customize something, and starting with the software you use the most (like an text editor, …). The standard GUI software (like your browser, LibreOffice) has GUI settings dialogues anyways.

lily33, in [Request] Where to start with dot files?

I wouldn’t say there’s a place to start. Once you start using programs that are configured through config files, learn about those config files in particular. Eventually, you might find that you prefer editing config files even for programs that have GUI settings - then you dive in more.

Regardless, once your config files become complex enough that you can’t quickly rewrite them if necessary, start looking for a dotfiles manager, tracking them in git, backing them up, etc…

governorkeagan, in (solved) I can't get my linux system to run properly

Is it only on YouTube? Have you tried another browser or watching a video locally?

kusivittula, in (solved) I can't get my linux system to run properly

my experiece is that with nvidia you can’t just choose which distro you want to use, you need to try them out and find the one that works. for me mint cinnamon worked great out of the box, i use the xanmod kernel on it because of load balancing. i’m still very much a noob but i have almost completely ditched windows, only need it for excel and word. also pop os gets praise for playing nicely with nvidia. not sure if running on vm can cripple something in the system, have you tried booting from a live usb?

rambos,

I have nvidia 1060 and popos is working likea charm. Was thinking what distro to choose, but have no reason to look any further

BCsven,

Well, kinda. openSUSE is directly supported by nVidia, they have a repo that nVidia hosts for SUSE openSUSE, leap amd tumbleweed. zero issues on my OpenSUSE machines, so their issue might be some other config / codec issue. packman repo is suggeated over OPI repos

OpticalMoose, (edited ) in Intel or AMD for ffmpeg?
@OpticalMoose@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

AMD APUs have Video Coding Engine / Unified Video Decoder, while Intel CPUs have QuickSync. FFMPEG’s hardware page says that AMD support is incomplete.

You may want to ask over in !datahoarder . This topic often came up back on Reddit, and the general vibe I got was that most people prefer QuickSync. Intel may not be great in a lot of areas, but they are a beast in video encoding/decoding. That being said, I use a Ryzen APU and it’s perfectly fine. There are way more important things to look at when choosing a CPU.

If your performance is slow, I would check your CPU is listed on the chart I linked above. Not all CPUs support all codecs.

Edit: If your CPU doesn’t support the codec, it will still work, it just won’t be accelerated.

drwankingstein,

quicksync really doesn’t have good quality:compression buying a used nvidia gpu and using that would be far better. but really, any moderatly up to date cpu should get good x265 or svtav1 perf

unknowing8343, in (solved) I can't get my linux system to run properly
rasensprenger, in (solved) I can't get my linux system to run properly

This may be a stupid question but is your video cable plugged into the gpu or into the motherboard?

Iapar,

Great question! I fuck that up every time.

0x4F50,

My brother and a friend built his computer and couldn’t figure this out. He called me a couple days later to vent some frustration and I said exactly the same thing.

“I know this is a stupid question, but is your Dport plugged into the mobo or the dedicated graphics card?”

“…”

🤦‍♂️

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