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tony, in The best RAID setup for internal HDD and does it actually make sense to use it all for gaming?

Raid 0 on 3x500GB triples your failure rate (especially important on older drives, as I presume these are), and still won’t get anywhere near an SSD in speed.

You could just mount the 3 drives separately and have storage that way, which means if one fails you’ve still got the data on the other two… it’d still suck but not as bad as losing everything.

If it was me I’d wait until I could afford the SSD… it’ll be many times faster and newer.

notthebees,

I mean it’s worth a shot. OP knows that much. If it works out, it’d tide them over until they get a new ssd

Uluganda,

I will only use it for game data. I highly value my personal data so I wont put anything remote to worthy in it, I have nas, separate drive, and even Google Drive. If it fails, the worst thing that will happen is I need to redownload all my games from Steam. It will be a bummer, but I think I should be able to restore the first game in matter of hours. My save data will be saved on Steam anyway.

Yeah, single hdd is only around 150mbps, not bad, but I saw 4 hdd can get to 600mbps, which is in realm of sata ssd. I’m just thinking to giving a shot, beside it’s only $20. If one fail, I still have 1tb.

CmdrShepard,

Are you accounting for stuff like SATA cables and cradle mounts for the HDDs in your cost calculation?

SuperIce, (edited )

Sequential speeds aren’t the only metric for storage performance though. Random reads are quite important and the HDDs will literally be hundreds of times slower than an SSD for random reads. It may be fine for older games if you’re fine with waiting for a minute at each loading screen, but some modern games now require SSDs and that number will likely skyrocket soon.

ivanafterall,
@ivanafterall@kbin.social avatar

This is what I do. I have a massive old-school hard drive and I use it for things like Rimworld or various indie games. It's honestly manageable for some more-demanding stuff, but if I try to run anything intensive, I might as well not play it, at all. The old-school drive is great for anything Steamdeck level or below, basically.

ares35,
@ares35@kbin.social avatar

agreed. games read a lot of random data. performance won't be nearly as 'good' as op expects.

the difference of $50 matters that much for op, i think that not spending anything would be the more prudent choice.

that said, if it were me i'd raid-0 two of them and keep the third as a single drop-in replacement for when that array dies; containing a full backup of the array's contents kept up-to-date with every major patch the games on it gets.

Uluganda,

Yeah, I’m mega broke right now, lol. For reference, $50 for average people is around 8 days worth of salary here. And I’m unfortunately, an average people.

thejml,

In that case a 3 drive RAID-5 is what you want. One drive dies you lose nothing but redundancy. You still get two drives with of data along with parity checking. It isn’t quite as fast as a zero, depending on hardware (most will max the HDD speed before being bottlenecks). Nothing will be as fast for random reads as an SSD or NVME, but you get the storage and piece of mind.

Quazatron,
@Quazatron@lemmy.world avatar

You can have separate disks attached to your Steam installation. You don’t need RAID at all for that.

Uluganda,

That RAID would be the separate disks. I surely wont use it to be my / or /home disks, it’s too risky. 3x500mb should give me theoretically 300-400mbps of sequential read/write.

Quazatron,
@Quazatron@lemmy.world avatar

If you really need the speed, sure, go ahead, but I suspect you won’t actually get that speed unless on very large sequential files.

Gentoo1337, in Is gnome going to become proprietary?
@Gentoo1337@sh.itjust.works avatar

No. Why would they do that?.

qwesx,
@qwesx@kbin.social avatar

So that people can't easily track how much time is spent on getting round window corners compared to how much time is spent not implementing thumbnails in a file chooser dialog?

18 years, by the way.

makingStuffForFun,
@makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml avatar

I, just 10 minutes ago, was looking for an artwork of mine to upload here on lemmy. I gave up. It’s beyond insane to not have a thumb nail option in the browser for a file upload.

KISSmyOS,

This also sent me last week. What in the actual FUCK?

stella, (edited )

Gnome3 devs prioritize what makes their jobs easier over what makes user experiences better.

I recommend switching to KDE if you want a DE with more features.

Kata1yst, in Red Hat paywall?! How the Raleigh giant divided the open source community.
@Kata1yst@kbin.social avatar

Don't besmirch Red Hat this way. Red Hat is as dead as Sun Microsystems at this point. They're just being Weekend at Bernie's-ed by IBM. Despite IBMs promise of independent operation and business as usual.

ieatpillowtags,

A colorful image but what does that even mean? I get not liking their decisions but they’re hardly dead…

Kata1yst,
@Kata1yst@kbin.social avatar

Red Hat is gone. The leadership, vision, people, and culture that made Red Hat Red Hat are gone. IBM has completely taken over internally. Red Hat's logo is being paraded around to keep people complacent due to their former reputation.

ieatpillowtags,

I think it’s a cop out to blame any of this on IBM as these kinds of changes started before the acquisition.

I also don’t know who you mean when you say the people are gone as most of the executive leadership have been with the company for a decade or two.

I guess I was sad when they killed shadowman but that was before IBM too!

stella,

they’re hardly dead…

It’s a matter of perspective. Just like how microsoft is dead for a lot of us because we don’t use their products, the same can be said about IBM and red hat.

rah, in FOSS 88 key pianos

piano software

What do you mean?

s38b35M5,
@s38b35M5@lemmy.world avatar

Wondering the same. DAW? DAW-Lite?

ForgotAboutDre,

High end digital keyboards market themselves as pianos.

rah,

That doesn’t answer my question.

ForgotAboutDre,

Digital keyboards (at least contemporary ones) use embedded systems that require software. OP wants a piano/digital keyboard that uses open source software.

I don’t think it exists (I don’t know of any). The software for these systems is going to be highly coupled to the feature set of that digital piano and the benefit of modifying the software is low. So it’s unlikely someone has made a open source digital piano.

If it exists its either a very small project, a manufacturer has chosen to release their software as open source or an adaptation of keyboard/synthesizer software. Although many libraries for such software are likely open source.

rah,

embedded systems that require software. OP wants a piano/digital keyboard that uses open source software.

How did you determine that?

starman, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?
@starman@programming.dev avatar

Check out framework laptops

Macaroni9538,

Thanks, will check out

Petter1, in How to choose a computer/laptop/device that is better compatible with linux? Are there certain things to look out for when shopping?

I just collect junk from my friends and install Linux on them, lol, you get what you get and make it work

Macaroni9538,

It’s just that my model is a newer generation Dell and I’ve heard from multiple people that Dell is getting more and more locked down and proprietary like Apple, so im thinking that’s why I haven’t had the best linux experience on this darn thing.

Petter1,

Have tried openSuse together with the community repo “packman”? OpenSuse was best distro with compatible driver yet.

BeatTakeshi,
@BeatTakeshi@lemmy.world avatar
Macaroni9538,

yes Ive heard they are good too, but i’ve been having issues with mine. it came with windows pre-installed, i doubt that plays much of a role but Idk. like the system is naturally fitted for windows only, so the linux experience has been a little rough around the edges. I have no clue, just a thought maybe

RustyOperator, in GNOME is (Gradually!) Dropping X11

They still haven’t added DRM Leasing to Wayland, which is needed for SteamVR to work and considering KDE (has had it for literally years, since 2021) and even COSMIC DE (and it’s not even out yet) both already have it, it’s just rediculous.

vanderbilt,
@vanderbilt@beehaw.org avatar

GNOME’s mantra is pretty much remove functionality if the maintenance burden is anything beyond lifting a finger. This might end up biting them however as it’s caused them to fall behind in supporting the features enterprises and consumers want out of a Linux desktop. Combine this with their weird obsession of making a pseudo-touch interface and it’s just not working.

MaxPower, in Why are gnome devs like this?

Why? Because most are working for free and don’t have time for BS. Let’s be serious, the amount of BS or low-effort tickets is high.

When an unpaid dev is sacrificing free time improving or fixing GNOME tickets better be well-written.

Having said that, closing well-written and well-reasoned tickets “just like that” and willy-nilly is ofc not OK either.

Kusimulkku,

Should probably read the ticket first

levir77987,

There are gnome devs paid to work full time. The most notorious dev stirring up drama (ebassi) is one of them.

deadcream,

Low effort tickets are ignored because they are bullshit.

High effort tickets are ignored because devs are lazy and can't be bothered to deal with complex and boring issues.

Well, at least that's how I roll as an open source developer lol.

Matt, in WAYLAND in 2023: how GOOD (or BAD) is it? Apps, GPUs, desktops, gaming...

Here is a link to the video on PeerTube.

beejjorgensen, in Bcachefs (A Linux file system) has lost a major sponsor, and is looking for funding
@beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

It would be excellent if he could get fully funded through Patreon. I chipped in a bit, and I don’t even use it–looks like a cool approach, though. There have to be enough enthusiasts out there to pitch in enough cups of coffee to cover his dev time.

teawrecks,

I’m not sure how much of a cut Patreon takes, but it seems like there would be better options out there for non-profit foss projects, no? Liberapay maybe?

beejjorgensen,
@beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Even though librapay doesn’t take a cut, the providers they use do. Someone is taking a cut; I just try to make it smallest with the least-shitty company. :) But it’s tough, as a buyer, to find ways to pay people. I really wish creators would have obvious tip jars, and there was a standard way to tag them in HTML so search engines could find them.

Skelectus, in Fedora or Mint for noob?
@Skelectus@suppo.fi avatar

As a fedoraman myself, I think Pop!_OS is a great option.

But are you doing this because your friend wants linux or because you want it? It’s okay to recommend it but don’t push it if they don’t need it.

whyNotSquirrel, in Linux empowered coffee, a must have.
@whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works avatar

It’s just a sticker right, or does a coffee machine really need an OS, I’m a little bit confused 😅

LunchEnjoyer,
@LunchEnjoyer@lemmy.world avatar

Sorry to ruin your dreams… It’s _just_a sticker 😢

general_kitten,

that is a moccamaster machine so i think it has only simple electronics. i would be surprised if there were even a small microcontroller in that machine.

Anticorp,

There isn’t. It’s one of the simplest coffee makers out there, also one of the nicest and most reliable, hence the $300 price tag.

vsis, in Fedora or Mint for noob?
@vsis@feddit.cl avatar

I recommend Mint.

Chances are your friend’s secondary laptop doesn’t have extra resources for Gnome to run smoothly. Sad thing is nowadays Gnome is very heavy and bloated.

Also, he may try both distros live-usb. Maybe he don’t care about Mint looking outdated. But if he does, you may try Fedora live-usb and check if university wifi works properly.

It’s his laptop after all, so I believe your appreciations on the beauty of desktop environments are secondary.

jack,

Good ideas, I will consider that.

It’s his laptop after all, so I believe your appreciations on the beauty of desktop environments are secondary.

You are right. I was thinking that the Fedora workflow might give him some Linux-exclusive benefits over Windows so he might consider switching his main laptop too. Mint is rather a drop-in replacement for Windows so the advantages of Linux are not very visible/important for a newcomer. At least compared to a DE like GNOME.

Gemini24601,
@Gemini24601@lemmy.world avatar

Mint doesn’t have to look outdated if you put a little work into it. Check out this fellow’s rice in unixporn: reddit.com/…/cinnamon_available_as_installable_is…

Evil_incarnate, in I made a mistake **RESOLVED**

I recommend next time to use btrfs. With / and /home (at least) as separate subvolumes. Each subvolume will use the space it needs, and no more. If you have a 500Gb SSD with 300Gb in /home, and 20 in / they both have 180Gb they can use.

And when you manage to fill the 500Gb, it’s easy to just add another drive to the volume.

GravitySpoiled,

Thx for eli5 the advantage of btrfs

SpiceDealer, (edited ) in Laptop companies: which one?
@SpiceDealer@lemmy.world avatar

While I’m yet to do it myself, I would suggest getting a Thinkpad T480 and upgrading its RAM. The reason you want a T480 is because it was the last Thinkpad to have user removable parts. One tip: when using eBay, make sure you filter out the T480s. The T480s is not the same as the T480 since it doesn’t have user removable parts.

wwwgem,
@wwwgem@lemmy.ml avatar

Thanks for the tip. I know a lot of people are going for Thinkpads and you’re specific recommendation may seem interesting but I’d like to support other companies like the ones I bought from so far (Toshiba, Lenovo, Dell, Vaio, Acer, PB, Razer) and I’d also like to build my own laptop from the start.

SpiceDealer,
@SpiceDealer@lemmy.world avatar

Of course. Just remember this when buying a laptop (and by extension a printer): FUCK HP!

AlpacaChariot,

HP are pretty awful when it comes to shenanigans with ink cartridges and all that, but HPLIP is great and deserves some credit.

SheeEttin,

I hate Lenovo and I have a Lenovo laptop. The company is shit but the laptops are great. I justify it by buying used.

const_void,

Lol that’s 6 years old!

bolapara,

Yeah it is but it’s a pretty capable laptop. I’ve replaced mine with a Framework 11th gen for my daily use but my T480 is currently hosting 10 VMs for my homelab. It’s got the base CPU, i5-8250U, 64GB of RAM and a 4TB SSD and is plenty of horsepower. I really only got the Framework because I was excited about the product and company, not because I was unsatisfied with the T480. I highly recommend it.

murvillian,

What parts other than one stick of RAM aren’t upgradeable on the t480s? The processor? I’ve seen screen swaps, touchpad swaps, keyboard, just about everything. I got one back in the summer, added a stick of RAM to get up to 16gb, it’s running at 3200mhz like the other one, and swapped in a new OEM battery. It’s been great. I also recently bought a e495 for around 60 bucks, it’s thicker and plastic-ey, but also a solid Linux machine running an AMD CPU. Are the newer t14s really that crippled in repairability?

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