linuxmemes

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Kedly, in Two moods

Is this true anymore with Steams Version of Linux? For the most part shit runs fine on my steam deck

azvasKvklenko,

Shit’s exactly the same, especially with Gamescope

And009,

Maybe if I install Mexican or Indian food the night before… Shit’ll change

wreckage, (edited )

That used to be true a few years ago, but now games just works without any tinkering from my experience. Except some online games due to kernel level anti cheats (like Fortnite and Valorant), but I prefer single player games anyway

h3rm17,

And some day 1 games lile starfield.

wreckage, (edited )

Makes sense. I only pay for games when they get discounted, so I didn’t know

Kedly,

Yeah I’ve never been big on competitive multiplayer, my Halo days were mostly campaign and due to thats what my friends were playing. So linux being blocked by competitive games is a non issue for me as well

thezeesystem, in Two moods

Wish I could play games on Linux, but for some fucking reason I can’t figure out my gaming laptop with Nvidia 1660ti will not work properly with most games. If I ever can afford a new computer I’m probably going with AMD instead tbh.

Commiunism,

I know this is quite unprompted, but did you install correct video drivers? You gotta install proprietary nvidia drivers and its 32-bit libraries instead of nouveau

redcalcium,

If your game run terribly on Wayland, try running in on X11, and vice-versa.

Caboose12000,

what distro are you using? I never had any issues on my nvidia build with nobara

abraxas,

Optimus? Because Optimus is an absolute bastard. It’s improved and I’ve had some luck, but it’s painful.

TunaCowboy, (edited )

What’s the output of nvidia-smi? If it’s a newer laptop you might need to add a machine owner key so that secureboot will allow the required dynamic kernel modules to load. In debian the module will be signed with the dkms signing key, adding it as a MOK is fairly simple. wiki.debian.org/SecureBoot#Making_DKMS_modules_si…

*Try disabling secureboot first, if things start working re-enable it and follow the advice above.

Crashumbc,

While it’s great that your helping them …

This answer is exactly WHY Linux isn’t desktop/gamer ready yet. At least for the masses.

dan,
@dan@upvote.au avatar

Good advice? In a meme thread? It’s more likely than you think.

possiblylinux127, in Not really, since I'm the admin 😁

Just use Linux (I know its not that simple)

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Actually, it kinda is… the mindset is mostly the problem IMO.

TheGrandNagus, (edited )

IMO the biggest problem is simply that not enough devices are sold with it.

The amount of people who want to/can be arsed to/even know they can install an OS on their PC is pretty small. And even then, most that can will just stick to what they know (this is obviously part of the mindset issue that you speak of).

If mainstream devices were sold with Linux on them, it would get over that hurdle, and also get over the daunting hurdle of “ok I want to switch to Linux, what’s a good distro?” hurdle, to which people online will say everything from Debian to fucking Arch Linux.

Chromebooks (bastardised though they may be) and the Steam Deck prove that Linux isn’t unviable. People just won’t install it of their own volition.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

And even then, most that can will just stick to what they know (this is obviously part of the mindset issue that you speak of).

It’s the change. People hate change, in general, not just in IT.

IT workers are used to frequent changes and they usually adapt quickly, so it’s not such a huge problem for them. But, most people aren’t used to change, they like things pretty much static.

If mainstream devices were sold with Linux on them, it would get over that hurdle, and also get over the daunting hurdle of “ok I want to switch to Linux, what’s a good distro?” hurdle, to which people online will say everything from Debian to fucking Arch Linux.

I’ve seen people recommend Arch for a beginner, that’s a terrible choice… it will drive potential users away. I usually recommend Mint for beginners, LMDE mostly nowadays, ince Ubuntu isn’t what it used to be and that will most probably leave a skewed picture to the user of what Linux is. Yes, there are tools that make things easier, but under the hood there is no UI, it’s all commands. You wanna jump in, go right ahed. You don’t feel OK with that, that’s fine as well, use whatever GUI tools you like, LMDE has plenty of them.

Chromebooks and the Steam Deck prove that Linux isn’t unviable. People just won’t install it of their own volition.

Yep, pretty much the truth. This basically means that if, oh let’s say, Debian cut a deal with some laptop/PC manufacturers, Linux could actually be used by many users.

0x4E4F, (edited )
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

And even then, most that can will just stick to what they know (this is obviously part of the mindset issue that you speak of).

It’s the change. People hate change, in general, not just in IT.

IT workers are used to frequent changes and they usually adapt quickly, so it’s not such a huge problem for them. But, most people aren’t used to change, they like things pretty much static.

If mainstream devices were sold with Linux on them, it would get over that hurdle, and also get over the daunting hurdle of “ok I want to switch to Linux, what’s a good distro?” hurdle, to which people online will say everything from Debian to fucking Arch Linux.

I’ve seen people recommend Arch for a beginner, that’s a terrible choice… it will drive potential users away. I usually recommend Mint for beginners, LMDE mostly nowadays, since Ubuntu isn’t what it used to be and that will most probably leave a skewed picture to the user of what Linux is. Yes, there are tools that make things easier, but under the hood there is no UI, it’s all commands. You wanna jump in, go right ahed. You don’t feel OK with that, that’s fine as well, use whatever GUI tools you like, LMDE has plenty of them.

Chromebooks and the Steam Deck prove that Linux isn’t unviable. People just won’t install it of their own volition.

Yep, pretty much the truth. This basically means that if, oh let’s say, Debian cut a deal with some laptop/PC manufacturers, Linux could actually be used by many users.

KrokanteBamischijf,

From personal experience working in a Microsoft ecosystem, it’s mostly a matter of being able to hire the right people.

There is a near-infinite source of IT workers that have some expertise with Microsoft software and services. And those kinds of numbers simply don’t exist for the Linux world, especially with all the different configurations out there.

Medium-sized organizations have to employ a strategy of throwing enough idiots at a problem in order to keep things running. This also creates some of the issues they need the idiots for because no one has detailed knowledge of how things work.

My attempts at proposing a linux-based application server have been met with all sorts of “but our domain policy”, “we can’t guarantee continuity”, “none of my people know how to admin this stuff” type responses.

It definitely is a matter of mindset, but there is also a big commitment to make if switching systems to Linux. And that is a choice managers will only make if the benefits are clearly illustrated in a businesscase.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Medium-sized organizations have to employ a strategy of throwing enough idiots at a problem in order to keep things running.

Lol 🤣, that’s one way to say it 😂.

And I meant more as in computers for personal use. I completely get why most things are MS centered in the workplace, and that’s fine. If the workflow requires it, there is nothing wrong with that.

Zink,

It’s pretty easy for me to use Linux at work thanks to VMs. But if you want to also avoid using windows or all the other Microsoft 365 stuff, that’s more difficult.

Suavevillain, (edited ) in Hey, have you ever heard of Pop!_OS?
@Suavevillain@lemmy.world avatar

I let a friend try out Linux after I’ve been using it for years and they were shocked how much easier some things are. I think the idea of throwing them into a like Windows distro is the wrong direction. I’m ready POP OS’s new desktop whenever it comes out.

mrmanager,
@mrmanager@lemmy.today avatar

This is the reaction I get from people too. :)

TheFonz, in Your average Wine enjoyer

If AutoCAD could run on Linux I’d change in a heartbeat

Furbag,

AutoCAD seems to be it’s own worst enemy.

TheFonz,

I think this software is on its way out anyway

KrokanteBamischijf,

Not sure if you’re going to like the route they’ll be taking.

https://www.infoq.com/presentations/autocad-webassembly

I bet AutoCAD will collapse either way if Microsoft decided to purge legacy components from the OS. Feel like the codebase hasn’t changed since the early days and it probably depends on some APIs that have been there since Windows ME.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

I bet AutoCAD will collapse either way if Microsoft decided to purge legacy components from the OS.

I’ve been saying this for years. Their code base is ancient, it’s just makeup on a granma.

The trouble is, I think MS saw through this. Why do you think backwards compatibility suddenly got so good with Win8/8.1/10, while it really sucked with 7 (blue screens all over, especially with drivers from XP). Hell, I’ve installed XP graphics drivers on Win10 x86 LTSC 2019 and everything was hunky dory. Sure, no Nvidia control panel (it just errors out when you try to rum it), but hey, at least they work. Same with software, CorelDRAW 12 was a PITA to get working properly on Win7. On 10, it works out of the box.

I think they were aware that their mobile OS escapades might flop, so they focused on getting better backwards compatibility. If this thing fires back (which it did), stick to your guns, you still are no.1 in the CAD software market.

KrokanteBamischijf,

While I’m not exactly an expert user of AutoCAD (my background is architecture, industrial design and full stack development), I know enough about the software where I can tell it’s based on a lot of legacy spaghetti code.

It’s the same for Solidworks, which I know through and through, including the shitty VBA scripting environment. My CAD teachers always used to say the software is built like a wooden playhouse, which has been extended over the years to include a second story, a slide, a swingset and a roof extension. But underneath it all, it is still the same “don’t fix it if it aint broke” codebase that Dassault has taken their chances on since the '90s.

The second someone invests any kind of money into an open source alternative, the way Blender has done for the mesh modeling industries, both Autodesk and Dassault systemes stand to lose their respective monopolies on 2D and 3D CAD.

But the trend is not limited to CAD software only, it is also highly prevalent in software providers for governmental tasks. Most of which sell the same products for years without iteration on their codebase. The result is that government organisations have to deal with shitty software that requires their individual users to connect to the database (yes, you heard that right, every user has to manually input database credentials that include all grants on all of the relevant datasets). Most of these cronies are reselling badly thought out software, where they’ve outsourced the development to third-world shitholes. Is is a goddamn miracle that there aren’t more major incidents with government organisations.

The only solution for this kind of bullshit is open standards that encourage an open source approach to these kinds of critical applications. Where more parties are actually encouraged to build their own software and where the businessmodel is built around being a service provider and not a magical black box salesman.

If you’re able to stop worrying about generating revenue based on your intellectual property and focus on generating revenue from the service you provide, surrounding your product… you’ll automatically build a better product.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

I completely agree, but there is a problem with that approach. It means you have to work hard… which is not what most of these software companies are ready to do.

Soup,

To be fair AutoCAD couldn’t be stable if AutoDesk built their own custom OS. It’s such hot garbage.

TheFonz,

I think the market share is shrinking anyway with BIM being ubiquitous

pewgar_seemsimandroid, (edited ) in Linux laptop recommendation thread🐧💻

uhh ThinkPad yes ThinkPad ThinkPad is linux THINKPAD PENGUIN

a a a a a a a a a a

a a a a a a a a a a

a a a a a a a a a

a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a

a a

a a a a.a a a

fine print: oh yea also framework

SLGC,

Which ThinkPad?

ChillPill,
@ChillPill@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve been rocking a first gen X1 Yoga (6th gen intel) for like 5-6 years, three or so of those years I’ve been using Pop!_OS and its been pretty good. I suspect that a 6th gen intel may be a little lacking for your uses, just to say that most ThinkPads will be good.

derpgon,

Rocking E15 Gen2 with AMD CPU for about 3 years now, can’t complain besides the fucking fingerprint reader having proprietary drivers (thus not working on Linux).

So, the E model line is a nice work laptop with basically no GPU performance whatsoever.

pewgar_seemsimandroid,

yes

drdnl, (edited )

We use about seven ThinkPad T16 and P16s professionally with zero issues. Can recommend

Edit: the AMD versions, those generally work better with Linux

aniki, in Songs about Vim

vim is easy

breakcore,

… yeeess

Just_Not_Funny,

So is yer mum

backhdlp, in Title
@backhdlp@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

It’s called unixporn for a reason

Telodzrum, in It happens 🤷

People are still using GRUB to dual boot? It’s not 2010 anymore. systemd-boot is the objectively superior choice.

maryjayjay,

Is systemd-boot a bootloader?

Telodzrum,

It’s a boot manager, technically.

nixcamic,

How does it compare to refind?

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Good for people that use systemd… what about the rest of us…

Telodzrum,

All six of you Luddites? You figure it out.

0x4E4F, (edited )
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

You should really take a closer look at the Void user base…

Telodzrum,

Loud doesn’t mean numerous. Ubuntu, Mint, Debian, Fedora, Arch, and Manjaro take up almost all of the desktop install market.

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah, and it’s a big market… all 6% of it.

My point was, systemd is not the only init system, there are others. Just because it’s used by over 90% of the Linux distros out there, doesn’t mean it’s the only one, thus offering a solution that is tied to systemd is not exactly a solution. Grub already has it figured out, why complicate things further.

Agent641,

I just unplug the exposed SATA cable from one ssd and plug it into the other SSD. I am the bootloader

callyral,
@callyral@pawb.social avatar

does systemd-boot require a distro that runs systemd or is it just the name

Telodzrum,

It’s part of systemd, just for those that use it.

AVincentInSpace,

laughs in rEFInd

also systemd-boot is just worse GRUB, CMV

Telodzrum,

I have no desire to engage with an objectively incorrect view. However, you are the second person to mention refind which I am unfamiliar with and I’m intrigued.

AVincentInSpace, (edited )

systemd-boot is GRUB but without customization and fewer supported features (LLVM root etc). What more is there to say?

rEFInd is (as the name implies) an EFI bootloader that, on every boot, scans all attached storage devices for a bootable partition and presents all those found in a boot menu with a quite nice graphical theme

Null, in Oh boy, goodie!
@Null@pawb.social avatar

Love this and now I’m expecting wallpapers for my xfce build.

SpaceNoodle, in Completely untrue nowadays...

Printers are pretty plug’n’play these days, at least until something technical goes wrong. Getting exactly what you want on paper can be pretty tough, though. I wrote an entire printing stack from scratch for an embedded system, but that was for a very specific set of models from a single manufacturer. It actually worked every time, especially when there were errors and warnings, but it took actual effort.

ndupont, in Your ads dont work here, brand!

We’re on holidays and the kids had me install WireGuard on their devices to get rid of the ads, you know, like it is at home.

possiblylinux127,

Just have them install ublock origin when they’re away from home. It is going to be way more efficient.

ndupont,

I’m not convinced it will help with the crazy invasive ads served in random free android games 😅 But I’ll look into it, thanks

Tikiporch,

PIA has an adblocker for their VPN service in the mobile app.

scarilog,

Set the private DNS in android settings to dns.adguard.com

Dehydrated,

I don’t know how Wireguard blocks your ads, but ok

ndupont,

We’re using it to access the LAN and the two pihole instances within

NominatedNemesis, in I am one of you now

Endeavour Os was the best thing I ever used. Easy to install, out of box is minimal but sufficient. I traded my Linux Mint to be able to customize my workflow, look and feel.

yamapikariya,
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

I used it for a while too before I learned about archinstall. eOS has a great community though. I use their forum to look for answers often

xenoclast, in I am one of you now

Is that Bobby Hill?!

yamapikariya,
@yamapikariya@lemmyfi.com avatar

Yes

wunami,
@wunami@lemmy.world avatar
kpw,

Thank you I tried to figure out how one could recognize Bobby Hill in this drawing.

xenoclast,

Seeing that face “in the wild” blew my damn mind.

sir_pronoun, in When you build from source 🥲

Maybe we’ll discover Gentoo is emitting as much CO2 as China

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

It’s Void, but still 😂.

callyral,
@callyral@pawb.social avatar

i also use void linux

0x4E4F,
@0x4E4F@sh.itjust.works avatar

Buddieeees ☺️.

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