edinbruh

joined 2 years ago
[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 6 points 4 months ago (5 children)

Does it support KaTeX math, git integration, and spell checking? I'm using vscode for note taking but it's slow and power hungry

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Systemd was actually a "clone" of apple's launchd. Similarities with windows arise from the fact that it makes sense to manage services in certain ways on modern OSs. Also services on windows are completely different from Linux and MacOS, they are even a different executable file format, not a normal exe.

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 30 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

I think you are confusing "windows like" with "user-friendly". A "bespoke archive, that you find on some developer's website, that you extract and somewhere it contains an executable and assets, that you move where you want to keep them, and then the user remembers to manually update it sometimes somehow" is not how you usually do stuff on Linux and is not even user-friendly.

Distributions come with programs like "gnome software" or "kde discover" that allows the user to graphically install programs from the distro's package manager, or from flatpak or snap. It will also help them to keep them updated and to manage dependencies. That is user-friendly.

I suggest using flatpak. It will work on almost all distros out of the box and will be easy to install and maintain for the user. If flatpak is too "bloated" for you because it uses containers, then you need to package it for every distro manually, but that's a lot of work. If it's something that just needs to be used once and never again, consider an appimage or a script, because they don't need to be installed.

Distros are different operating systems, it's not gonna be easy to package for all of them without compromises.

Also, if you really really really need to use your bespoke archive, you can do like native steam games do, and put every library you link in the archive, and link with relative paths instead of system wide paths, or with a launch script that loads your provided libraries. But that's not a great user experience. Steam gets away with it because it's the launcher that manages the whole thing.

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

I can't. Proton-experimental specific is required for the game to run without disabling dx12 which will lower performance. With proton-ge the game crashes instantly

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 5 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (3 children)

The only "problem" is that it's not making 60 fps even in the benchmark. Which is fine, it's a heavy game, but I would be bummed if it was due to proton overhead and not due to my gpu

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 25 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (3 children)

You are not supposed to power the GPU like that. You should use two separate cables from the supply. The other connector of the same cable is intended to "daisy chain" low power cards.

It will probably work anyway, but better safe than sorry.

Edit: I think it's needed because:

  1. The power supply might have separate circuits for separate cables and might not be able to supply all the power needed by the GPU through just one
  2. The cable might not be rated to have that much power flow through and might overheat and melt over time
  3. If you could just fork the cable into two why would they put two connectors on the GPU, it's not like they have different voltages, they are literally daisy chained
[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 1 points 4 months ago

This is a quail egg, this is an American egg, and this big one is a black goat's egg

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 1 points 5 months ago

Frutiger Aero

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 4 points 5 months ago

In addition to what the others have said, windows has already had its big paradigm change ("similar" to the change from x11 to Wayland that is happening) in the past. It was around 2007 with windows Vista. They also didn't get it quite right on the first try, but because Microsoft can do whatever they want, and in Linux you must convince the community that something is better, it was easier for them to just change everything under everyone's nose.

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Hmmm. That's suspicious, there's a number of things in the way of video acceleration with that setup.

First of all, the fact that on fedora (ublue is a derivative of fedora) you need to install openh264 from dnf and not from Firefox extension manager, and then you still need to change some settings in about:config . Second, you are using a flatpak, I'm not sure if openh264 needs to be installed "inside the flatpak". And last, it might just be the Nvidia.

The first two would also affect AMD.

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 19 points 5 months ago (3 children)

Mesa drivers for opengl, vulkan, etc. are likely already installed, what you need to install are the mesa-va and mesa-vdpau drivers for video acceleration. Other than that, you just need to make sure the GPU doesn't stay in power saving mode when you play.

Btw, video acceleration with Nvidia mostly works if you use this.

[–] edinbruh@feddit.it 9 points 5 months ago

Mine is: I don't really listen to music

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