Who would’ve thunk that big, for profit, tech companies don’t care about us :T
Who would’ve thunk that big, for profit, tech companies don’t care about us :T
Kinda, we’re all a little confused here.
uBlock will stop websites from tracking you.
uBlock will not stop your browser from tracking you
Modem hardware.
The default kernel Mint has installed isn’t new enough to support cards like the 7900 XT. Though this can be fixed by updating the kernel using Mint’s kernel version utility
*I get a kick from not having any professional workloads that require GPU compute
Fixed that for you.
As long as the drive the swap is on is an SSD, yeah absolutely
TL;DR, ddosing AUR multiple times, poorly maintained certificates, and a generally bad take on Arch that causes lots of problems for the uninitiated.
To temper your expectations you’ll likely have some problems. But you’ll have the ability in future to make use of new display technologies, like VRR and HDR
The problem is it’s completely unwatchable. Streams are 2 fps no matter how low or high quality you set the stream :c
I agree, endeavor doesn’t do anything special with its packages to make it any more reliable. In fact it’s really just Arch but with a DE setup out of the box
I highly recommend you try Linux Mint or Fedora, both are simple to use, stable, and well supported.
I personally use Fedora for development and gaming, but you might enjoy mint more for your use case
Only office is what I use for school and it’s excellent, otherwise the full MS suite is available in the browser.
Highly recommend against Manjaro for anyone for any use case
See: https://manjarno.pages.dev/
I can corroborate the article from my personal experience, Manjaro is a terrible OS with constant stability issues
You need the game scope session, which there’s only a package for Nobara and I think Arch too but don’t quote me on that
And the session will require you to log out, which can be a massive pain in the ass.
This, waydroid is excellent, I use it all the time
The checking media message is your bios trying to boot from some external network drive. I had that issue for the longest, and I realized that I misunderstood how the boot order actually worked.
Try swapping your boot order around to opposite how it is currently? That’s what I did and it solved my problem
Have you perchance installed the proprietary drivers? The open source drivers aren’t any good
Are you using snaps? Snaps are notorious for God awful performance.
This, even still, with only one drive, I’ve done it before as a novice, if you rtfm you’ll be fine. Otherwise yeah, just put it on a second drive
They put in the absolute minimum amount of resources for it.
It’s also littered with bugs as the ZLUDA project has noted