JC'sBarber
Educated
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2024
- Messages
- 125
I hope we start seeing more native linux games, and games that use open APIs like Vulkan instead of DirectX. So many PC games rely on Microsoft software to run, it's ridiculous.
Y'know, 99% of all distros are pointless, they just save you like 30 minutes of installing stuff yourself.
This was my first problem back when I wanted to do the switch: people would recommend Ubuntu, Pop!, Mint, Debian, Fedora, ''just'' learn to install Arch, trolls would recommend Gentoo/Nix, etc.
This is most obvious initial problem with Linux: too much division, too many slightly different choices, too many ''protest'' distros like Mint, Artix, Devuan, etc
When I first tried Mint, I had no idea what the hell was the difference between a normal package, a flatpack, or why I was supposed to hate snaps, it doesn't say anything about that in the actual OS.
I really don't understand why there isn't a community-driven Linux wiki where all this stuff is easily explained, instead of having to comb through a hundred different forums every time you need to find a command or the name of some stupid package.
To clarify: I don't have these problems, I'm talking about the initial experience of most people.
it is nowadays severely lacking behind Windows.
Customization ? Integration ? Easier software and driver development ? No big buck licensing ?LOL. No way. Military forces around the world uses Linux by a reason.
Customization ? Integration ? Easier software and driver development ? No big buck licensing ?
I'd be glad if you could give me a source to your claim or any in-depth articles about Linux use in the military.
The french used this thing for years:Customization ? Integration ? Easier software and driver development ? No big buck licensing ?
I'd be glad if you could give me a source to your claim or any in-depth articles about Linux use in the military.
nigga you may need DXVKIt only takes 200 hours and programming socks to get the games to run on Linux.Everything needed to install games is automated with a very friendly UI in some distrosDone.Code:$ install wine $ wine64 game.exe
may need DXVK
While it has NOT been proven that Window present any backdoor or security risks
Not counting individual developers that can be under NSA pressure
Im fucking sick of the updates too. The explorer also sucks dick, working with the filesystem in general is cancer, copying a lot of small files takes forever, forced to use robocopy. Heard AMD drivers are better on linux (amd drivers broke resolve, for example, but a friend said it didn't happen on linux). And then there's a bunch of cool software that's linux only...I bought a Linux laptop after getting violently angry at windows update for the 1000th time in my life
the seven games that run on linux do run faster
ProtonDB has 16,230 verified or playable games. In my steam library, only 4% of my games borked. Some games like Jade Empire, I can't run in M$ spybloatware but can easily run in Linux. M&M VII from CD(not from GoG) too. Runs perfectly in Linux and can't be run in M$ spybloatware.
Okay, now show me any online multiplayer games. Oh wait...
I had WINE update and it made anything that use it go very slowly despite having powerful enough hardware. Felt like I was playing everything in slow motion. Also, pulseaudio kept shitting itself at inopportune times. Once my distro updated and a critical part for samba prevented the distro from booting, I cut my losses, decided to stop using the computer in question, and now plan on using Windows 11. While I can jump to another distro and spin the wheel again, I'm tired of fiddling with Linux shit for the time being. There is potential, but things need to be ironed out.Interesting. Never had that happen with wine.a random repository and everything breaks.
Ubuntu I don't recommend because snaps.
Later I tried OpenSuse, but it was... weird.
I hope we start seeing more native linux games, and games that use open APIs like Vulkan instead of DirectX. So many PC games rely on Microsoft software to run, it's ridiculous.
What's your opnion about EndeavourOS? If you tried of course.OpenSuse is a fine distro, or rather Tumbleweed (the only serious rolling release distro I would even consider). The documentation sucks (even worse than Fedora's) but nothing stops you from referencing the Arch wiki instead for the general stuff and the idiosyncrasies proper to the distro are easy enough to figure out. Base software selection from their official repos kind of sucks (better than official Arch at least), so you will rely on flatpaks/snaps/appimages or their OBS sometimes. Their stance on non-free codecs is problematic and the solutions are to either use Pacman (not a good option for Tumbleweed) or just use flatpaks/snaps/appimages. The graphical YAST package manager sucks (too slow) but hey, at least it's a proper graphical package manager and not an "app store" like most popular distros are using now. I like that they update their mesa package to the latest point release rather fast (faster than Arch).
What's your opnion about EndeavourOS? If you tried of course.OpenSuse is a fine distro, or rather Tumbleweed (the only serious rolling release distro I would even consider). The documentation sucks (even worse than Fedora's) but nothing stops you from referencing the Arch wiki instead for the general stuff and the idiosyncrasies proper to the distro are easy enough to figure out. Base software selection from their official repos kind of sucks (better than official Arch at least), so you will rely on flatpaks/snaps/appimages or their OBS sometimes. Their stance on non-free codecs is problematic and the solutions are to either use Pacman (not a good option for Tumbleweed) or just use flatpaks/snaps/appimages. The graphical YAST package manager sucks (too slow) but hey, at least it's a proper graphical package manager and not an "app store" like most popular distros are using now. I like that they update their mesa package to the latest point release rather fast (faster than Arch).
What's your opnion about EndeavourOS? If you tried of course.OpenSuse is a fine distro, or rather Tumbleweed (the only serious rolling release distro I would even consider). The documentation sucks (even worse than Fedora's) but nothing stops you from referencing the Arch wiki instead for the general stuff and the idiosyncrasies proper to the distro are easy enough to figure out. Base software selection from their official repos kind of sucks (better than official Arch at least), so you will rely on flatpaks/snaps/appimages or their OBS sometimes. Their stance on non-free codecs is problematic and the solutions are to either use Pacman (not a good option for Tumbleweed) or just use flatpaks/snaps/appimages. The graphical YAST package manager sucks (too slow) but hey, at least it's a proper graphical package manager and not an "app store" like most popular distros are using now. I like that they update their mesa package to the latest point release rather fast (faster than Arch).
I feel your pain, as I'm just as unlucky with computers, and I work in technology. The only thing I encourage is for folks to use a cloud based storage service (Dropbox, Google Drive, whatever) to store your critical info. When your system drivers stop or the system becomes unstable, start over and make improvements based on what you have learned.Because my IRL luck stat is very low, so if things can go wrong, they will. My dosbox stopped working from nothing, and I lost my M&M IV: Clouds of Xeen save. A update broke the nVidia driver. Another update makes Chrome stop working. VScode, Docker, QMake, everything that I need to work also suddenly stop working. I only used it because everyone at work was using it. I like Debian because things just work and nothing breaks. If I want to deal with instability, I would be using M$ spybloatware.
Wayland doesn't work for me. I'm using X11.
Pointless.What do you guys think about gaming distros? Like Nobara, Garuda, etc?
EndeavourOS is the one I picked from these because its pretty much an Arch with some preinstalled stuff, everything you can do in Arch you can do here. I've taken a shortcut because last year I tried using Arch for gaming and it was... okay but sometimes stuff randomly broke. So I just picked up something that is quick to install to check it out, and I stayed with it. I guess Endeavour has nothing to do with it, just overall improvement in Linux gaming happened.What do you guys think about gaming distros? Like Nobara, Garuda, etc?
Gaming on Windows is objectively better than gaming on Linux.
VKD3D_SHADER_MODEL=6_6 gamemoderun %command% -noh
Pointless.
Imagine being so ridiculously lazy than rather than spend 30 minutes installing all of that stuff yourself,
~/.steam/steam/steamapps/common/
~/.steam/steam/steamapps/compatdata/<game_id>/pfx/drive_c/
~/.steam/steam/steamapps/compatdata/489830/pfx/drive_c/Program Files (x86)/Steam/steamapps/common/Skyrim Special Edition/
WINEDLLOVERRIDES="dinput8.dll=n,b" %command%