

Huh, thanks. That works from iOS to my Bazzite desktop flawlessly.
👽Dropped at birth from space to earth👽
👽pup/it/she👽
Huh, thanks. That works from iOS to my Bazzite desktop flawlessly.
I saw one on another article here that was just a stock image of some penguins, I rather liked that.
I would potentially give Ventoy a shot. Since it’s bootstrapping the iso after it’s already booted, you might have better luck. Even if you don’t want to install it that way for a secure system, it might help you with troubleshooting, because if it boots like that you can figure out what the difference is.
If it was going to be any year, and yes I know this is said a lot, it would be this year. With Win10 support ending, a bunch of Millennials are going to install it on their Boomer parent’s computers. You have the German government installing it on every computer they run. Major companies like Lenovo releasing handhelds with it pre-installed.
What are you even talking about? 16GB is plenty for most people’s laptop use cases. What was criminal was when the default was 8GB, but they seem to have stopped that now. In saying that, the pre-built Framework 12 starts at 8GB, though that’s a lot less criminal when it’s not soldered on.
Why are you being so unpleasant? Just chill out mate.
Wait, why?
Rather than vanilla Fedora KDE, maybe give Bazzite a go. It’s Fedora KDE but focused on gaming with a bunch of nice additions. Plus it’s immutable, so once everything’s set up, it’s pretty hard to break.
It also just flies in the face of open-source, to use what was likely a closed-source image genAI to produce the image.
There are plenty of already existing images for this they could reuse. For example:
YouTube no longer allows any reference to gambling sites or applications “not certified by Google.”
It’s literally on the Play Store, rated at M.
Oo, excited for BG3. Been wanting mods for my second playthru and wasn’t excited for the prospect of doing that manually.
I can’t guarantee this, but I think most motherboards would fail safe if the dGPU is removed and give you the UEFI over the iGPU. If you’re worried about it, you could always change the setting, then remove your GPU to test what happens when you try to pull up the UEFI.
In general, I’d suggest being a bit more curious and playing around with stuff, even if more carefully. Like you said you didn’t understand the options for OpenRGB and it sounds like you didn’t try installing it at all to eliminate it as an option before posting. I understand being anxious but you’re not going to learn much if you’re not willing to muck up sometimes. It’s not like an app like OpenRGB is going to break your GPU or anything.
Yes but apt-get isn’t a seperate package from apt, just a seperate command. All of the apt-* commands are part of the same package, which is now Apt-3.0. This isn’t really what the user above you was asking.
Ah cool, thanks :)
Pretty sure that’s an AI-generated image at the start of that article. That’s when I stopped reading it.
ITT: people that don’t understand that more OEMs ditching Windows for Linux on flagship gaming handhelds is an incredibly good thing for Linux gaming overall, and would instead rather make the same joke over and over about ink cartridges.
MacOS actually does now support DX12: https://forums.macrumors.com/threads/apple-built-a-directx-12-translation-layer-for-apple-silicon.2391876/