[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 days ago

I will count to three. there will not be a four. give. me. the. code.

19
submitted 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) by dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml to c/buildapc@lemmy.world

not really "build" a PC, more "upgrade" but I guess people here might know relevant stuff.

anyhow, I'd like to upgrade storage and get a 2 TB drive. in the $100-region I have these models available:

  • ADATA Legend 710 ALEG-710-2TCS
  • ADATA Legend 800 ALEG-800-2000GCS
  • Crucial P3 CT2000P3SSD8
  • KINGSTON SNV2S/2000G
  • KINGSTON SNV3S/2000G
  • Lexar LNM620 LNM620X002T-RNNNG
  • Seagate BarraCuda Q5 ZP2000CV3A001
  • Seagate BarraCuda ZP2000CV3A002

I imagine they're all bottom of the barrel type of deal, no DRAM cache, QLC, etc., but this would be my third drive of such variety (500 GB and 1 TB previous) and I had no issues daily driving 'em, linux with btrfs with HMB support.

so, before I start researching them all one-by-one, does one of these stand out as way better? the target hardware is AMD Ryzen 5 5600 on a B450 board. thanks!

edit: so, I got the data for the models from here and here's an image of the result (can I post tables in markdown?)

just as I though, no DRAM on either of those.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 days ago

I disagree on both them counts. for an intermediate user, sure. for a try-to-dip-their-toes first-time user, absolutely not.

VMs are OK for one-off or compartmentalised tasks. running linux on anything but bare metal is a sub-optimal experience and off-putting. it's essential for the user to get the feedback in snappy and satisfying response to their actions, which is easily accomplished even on 10-year old hardware, while being a tall order for any VM deployment. not to mention, any intense graphic use (an important part of OP's spec) is nothing but crap in that scenario.

dual-boot scenarios are not for beginners. a) you can fuck something up and thus relieve you of a safe fall-back and b) you can't switch between workstation #1 and #2 concurrently, reboots are jarring focus breakers.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 days ago

the list of things you'd like to be able to seamlessly transition over is kinda... well, that's a lot of stuff. anyone claiming you can pull this off whilst maintaining any semblance of productivity is deluded.

my advice would be, get yourself a second machine. powerful hardware is stupid cheap nowadays and you can get a semi-competent laptop in the $100 region. take your time setting it up, always having the option to tear everything down and start over as it's not your primary rig. start with a beginner friendly distro, Mint or Ubuntu, try 'em both and see which you like better.

then, just start doing the things from the list. item 1, easy-peasy. item 7 next, huh that was easy. next item 4, then 5... you're gradually transitioning, without any downtime and always having the fallback option of your existing setup. before you know it, you're a Linux user!

by the time you figure all this stuff out, you'll have the knowledge and confidence to nuke windows for good and jump in both feet, not to mention - your laptop as a fallback.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 2 points 4 days ago

C-suite justifying payroll delays with outside factors (waiting for payment from customers, etc.) is a long-standing worker oppression tactic that no-one should take lying down. at the first inkling of such a maneuver, stand fast and tell 'em to go to a fucking bank and take out a short-term loan to service payroll and then they can wait for payment or whatever. this is not a reason for payment delay, it's an excuse and you'd do well to treat it as such.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago

But Lenovo only had the first gen available for sale,

can you share which model that is?

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

then you ain't got no problem, Jules.

the ATV builds are here: https://konstakang.com/devices/rpi4/

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago

yes happens with scaling

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 days ago

long-standing Konsole bug, fixed in newer versions like the ones in Fedora. some people had success with playing with Line spacing and Margins in Settings/Profiles/Appearance/Misc

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 0 points 6 days ago

I understood you fine. what I'm saying is, you don't need to use the 1 KW PC when the 5 W Raspy can fulfill all the roles you stated - media playback (local and online) and remote gaming from your new rig. if you know Raspy's power by way of the crap that is Kodi - a bloated, slow as molasses, buggy zombie patched for 20 years and held together by duct tape - then you might be surprised with how it can run. also, you have the option of running LineageOS AndroidTV with native apps for all three stated roles.

if you're adamant about repurposing your old PC it in that role, your best bet would be bazzite, a 10-foot UI-having SteamOS clone. but then, you're smashing into the wall that is Nvidia on Linux; a fun project but not really a plug and play solution for the living room.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 3 points 6 days ago

I can do 2 out of 3. instead of running the abomination that is Kodi, you can install normal linux to the Pi (Raspbian), and then add on jellyfin-mpv-shim (or plex-mpv-shim) and macast (for youtube, peertube, etc and it also supports DLNA). they are sinks, i.e. there is no UI for you to interact with. instead, you use your mobile phone or tablet to browse your library, youtube, whathaveyou. when you want something played, you send it to the sink and it plays it in full screen. you can use the mobile device to control playback (pause, ff/rew, change subs, etc.).

can't help with the gaming part, moonlight/sunshine should do that but I haven't got any experience with them.

the Pi 4 you got is more than adequate for all the mentioned tasks.

[-] dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 days ago* (last edited 6 days ago)

for games that fell off a truck or something, maybe look here. I've found almost all of those I've found in the mentioned way to work without issues with lutris.

as to upgrading the games, hadn't tried that. I know there are periodic updates for popular titles (like Cyberpunk 2077) released and you can find them in the same place you found the game, but seems too much hassle.

4
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml to c/kde@lemmy.ml

so, I have a couple of Flatpak electron apps that need to be coerced into running under Wayland (Element, Freetube, etc.). they run fine with Xwayland, but I need xlsclients (show Xwayland apps) output to be empty for unrelated reasons. so what I'm doing is:

  1. determining where the .desktop file is, by way of right-clicking app in the Application Launcher, Edit Application, etc.
  2. reconstructing where the file actually is, as I usually get a symlink
  3. copying the file to ~/.local/share/applications/
  4. editing the file to add --enable-features=UseOzonePlatform,WebRTCPipeWireCapturer --ozone-platform=wayland or whatever its case may be

that's it, Plasma picks up the change almost instantly.

this seems super-convoluted, is there a better way?

32
submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml to c/linux_gaming@lemmy.ml

this may be old news to y'all, but I've discovered this freakin' thing: https://downloads.fcmodding.com/fc5/. it's a moding tool that allows various upgrades to the standard Far Cry experience. there's a linux version which works wonderfully - point it to the FarCry.exe and it does its thing!

in addition to the tool, there's the Resistance mod with tons of tweaks. for me, the most important one was lowering the rewards so I have to finish all the missions, side quests, etc. before facing the Seed family members. otherwise, the game is over way too soon.

I also enabled skip intro (AMD, epilepsy, etc.) and start the game at Dutch's bunker, skipping the flight in and the car chase, thus eliminating prime irritants for replaying. I might try a patch that forces Vulkan instead of DX11 later on.

also, it works without issues with my game that I found somewhere, fell off a truck or something, I don't know...

24
77

Libreboot support for T480/T480s is here!

10

Jamie Zawinski's (of Netscape/Mozilla fame, check out Code Rush if you're unfamiliar) humorous but enfuriating take on his club's battle with the music "industry" shakedown.

15

I mean, come on.

other than changing theme or userChrome any other options?

22

the transparent hair and beards, I seem to remember there was some antialiasing setting or something that causes this but I can't remember which. naturally, searching the webs is useless. help?

all AMD, wine 9.1, lutris

25

are there any older ex-office mini PCs like the elitedesk, optiplex, thinkstation, etc models that can fit a 3.5" drive? Not looking for anything new and thus expensive, just want some old junker (6/7/8th gen Intel) that can host some light stuff. thanks

7

so, just to check, this thing's useless, right?

got a 5-year old phone with a degraded battery that lasts half a hummingbird's fart and installed lineageOS 21. yet the battery info claims the battery is in excellent condition.

82
submitted 4 weeks ago by dingdongitsabear@lemmy.ml to c/linux@lemmy.ml

after trip-digit linux installs in the past year or so, here's my list for a seamless transition for people escaping windows/macOS who need to get work done:

1) don't tailor linux to your hardware, do it the other way around. get hardware that works OOB. no nvidia. no latest hardware. no weird realtek chipsets in budget deal-of-the week e-waste, no gaming (i.e. nvidia) laptops.

that don't mean breaking the bank, a thinkpad with 8th gen or newer CPU can be had for $100ish; add $50 or so to expand RAM and storage and that covers like 90% of use cases. a competent all AMD desktop a gen or two behind current tech that can game almost anything can be easily assembled for less than $400.

fedora and adjacent forums are littered with cries for help about stuff breaking or not working at all; 90% of those are nvidia related. can you make it work - absolutely. is that something you're willing to dick around on a deadline - hell nah.

2) no theming. no icons, no fonts, no plymouth screens, nada. as few extensions/plugins as you can, run it as close to stock as possible. shit's gonna break, this is a work device, you can't afford downtime because the single dev maintaining the thingy hasn't updated it for the newest Gnome of Plasma. Gnome don't feel like macOS? you'll get used to it; muscle memory is a removed but it's a tameable one.

an additional moment, especially if you're on a laptop, is to make the thing as fungible as possible. that's an easily breakable/losable thief-magnet, you want a setup that can be reproduced with as little fuss as possible so you can be operational again.

3) don't dual/triple/whatever boot. that's an advanced scenario, it's gonna break eventually and if that's a device you depend on for work or education, you don't want any of that. run it as a single OS occupying the whole disk; encryption on a mobile device is mandatory. if you absolutely need multiple OS, a 2nd device is stupid cheap and it compartmentalises your shit, i.e. one for work, one for private/gaming, etc.

4) no weird distros. no arches, no gentoos, no immutable thisisthefuture shit. when it becomes mainstream, we'll switch. until such time, middle of the road - fedora for newest hardware, mint for ancient stuff, ubuntu for everything else. a lot of people made sure they're operational OOB, it's less likely stuff will break and if it does, there's an army of folks who asked and answered whatever's bothering you.

5) no weird DEs. wayland only, gnome for laptops and tablets, plasma for desktops, there is no third option. you're transitioning from an infinitely polished UI and the best tech that money can buy, you want the closest possible experience and the widest used environment, worked on by the largest dev community aware of the widest possible usability issues, working towards fixing/implementing them. you're already relearning shit, invest that time wisely.

6) separate your system stuff from your applications as much as possible. purge all user-facing apps, like firefox and media players and such from the system's package manager (apt or dnf) and reinstall them from flatpak. that was a headache a few years ago, nowadays almost everything works OOB on wayland. the apps include everything they need to work, the setup is easy to maintain and recreate, upgrades are better (no reboots necessary) and all your settings and data are in one place.

this covered 90% use cases of 90% of the users I've dealt with. naturally, edge cases are gonna have a bad time - you want to ollama this and that and rock bleeding edge hardware and have a normal desktop experience? it's gonna hurt. you need mac-like power management and days away from power? doable but that needs work.

remember, this is a work device. for the same reason you don't decide to "upgrade" the suspension on the car that's supposed to get you to work the morning of, you don't mess with what's likely the only device you need for work/education.

greybeards dunking on you because you're not a "real" linuxer? enamoured with the spicy screenshots from linuxporn? get a $20 thinkpad and go wild - arch it, sway it, have the scrolling text on boot, rice it till it bursts. but leave your workhorse be.

17

anyone tried building android for their device on a sub-stellar PC? my phone doesn't have LOS21/A14 available so I tried the build-it-yourself route... dios mio, this takes eons!

I know it's a huge code base, but I had no concept of the size... I've left it syncing the repo like two hours ago and it's at 10%. no idea if it's gonna build at all and if it takes a day to download the thing and another one to build it (Ryzen 5) maybe I should go look for a $100 replacement that still gets LineageOS.

anyone been down this road?

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dingdongitsabear

joined 2 years ago