I wonder how much this will affect the power usage during boot on my laptop with its integrated AMDGPU. Granted, boot time is fairly short so hopefully this won’t really matter.
I wonder how much this will affect the power usage during boot on my laptop with its integrated AMDGPU. Granted, boot time is fairly short so hopefully this won’t really matter.
Alas we still should encourage this by responding positively when a company does the right thing
May I assume this will run exceptionally well on a steam deck?
“Do no evil (alone)”
The prompts to upgrade Office 365 every time my gaming PC updates really hurts after using a Linux machine all day
Oh wow, this is amazing info. Thanks!
I just followed that exact tutorial and got Assassin’s Creed: Syndicate working. Went pretty much perfectly. The only hitch I had was I missed the bit about needing quotes when changing the paths.
I didn’t have any trouble with download speeds, mine was downloading at our full 100Mb/s
I thought that as long as the kernel is new enough, the Radeon driver should already be in the kernel
I recommend LunarVim for VS Code users too
I too adored Braid. I think it was the first puzzle platformer that I truly enjoyed
I really liked this game until one of the boss fights was too difficult and I couldn’t proceed. I thought I had a pretty good handle on the combat too. Guess it’s not for filthy casuals like me
Sound Open Firmware (SOF) is an open source audio Digital Signal Processing (DSP) firmware infrastructure and SDK. SOF provides infrastructure, real-time control pieces, and audio drivers as a community project. The project is governed by the Sound Open Firmware Technical Steering Committee (TSC) that includes prominent and active developers from the community. SOF is developed in public and hosted on the github platform.
Annoyingly this feature isn’t available in Edge on Linux
I’m thinking evaporative cooling (paired with refrigerative cooling)
Unfortunately the choice of desktop environment matters a lot when talking about features like this
I suggest trying KDE instead, as XFCE is far from the user friendly interface your used to with Windows. Some DEs are good for new users, XFCE isn’t one of them
Whoever suggested Xubuntu for a Windows user is a bit optimistic
Fallout: New Vegas looks great on a small screen and runs really well on the Deck. I found it to look really dated on a larger screen, but not so much on the Deck. It’s also not very demanding, so easy on the battery
Ah right, thank you, I missed that somehow