

I wasn’t snarky to begin with, and I don’t owe anyone politeness.
👽Dropped at birth from space to earth👽
👽pup/it/she👽
I wasn’t snarky to begin with, and I don’t owe anyone politeness.
ELI5 is a pretty established thing that’s self-evident.
You’re really a chummy type, aren’t ya?
Oo, thanks for the tip!!
I’m sorry you weren’t able to understand it, do you need an explain like I’m five?
Notion, Obsidian and Evernote are also second brain apps. None of the major ones are open source though, which is what makes this project cool. It’s fine if that’s not useful for you, but the way you’re replying is kind of reductive, and honestly a bit mean.
A lot of people see the Celeron name and recoil, but the modern ones are quite competent.
The 8840U is equivalent to the Z1E that’s in the Lenovo Legion Go and ROG Ally X, so it’s a super competent chip! If gaming is your main use case, you might wanna check out Bazzite :)
I would assume it’s a hash but yes, it needs an audit.
I put my money where my mouth is: https://threadiverse.link/lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/30782618
Yeah, alright mate 🙋♀️
LMAO I love when people crawl out of the woodwork when a new user is having these sorts of difficulties to suggest one of the top 3 most difficult distros. I love your work, 7/5 with rice, no notes.
Bazzite is, for all intents and purposes, what SteamOS on desktop will be. It was designed as a souped-up SteamOS for the deck, and then added support for other handhelds and desktops as well.
Edit: I should say as well, if you have an NVIDIA card then you should definitely look at Bazzite, as it’s likely that early releases of SteamOS desktop are going to be AMD-only as the Steam Deck and Legion Go S are, and I doubt Valve will ship support for NVIDIA until the open drivers are as solid as AMD.
Emulation is a hell of a drug…
Ah yeah, I know the one you mean. It seems to be intermittently fixed but I’ve just rolled-back when it causes issues.
Like the other poster said, the open drivers aren’t for the 10-series and earlier. It’s because the microcode that NVIDIA wants to keep proprietary is within the GPU on later series, rather than the driver.
I’m rolling a 1080 on Bazzite and it’s worked great for me, as well as NVIDIA does on Linux generally. Which is to say, much better than it was 2+ years ago but still could do with some improvements.
I don’t get the point you’re making?
This is my original comment: https://threadiverse.link/lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/16113252