

I’ve just been avoiding nvidia the last couple of times I bought a GPU because they were so goddamn expensive, lol. It is just super convenient that this coincided with me starting to game on Linux.
Fleddit in June 2023.


I’ve just been avoiding nvidia the last couple of times I bought a GPU because they were so goddamn expensive, lol. It is just super convenient that this coincided with me starting to game on Linux.


Switched my gaming rig over a few weeks ago (Fedora 43 with KDE in my case). The games I play have generally performed better than on the same hardware under Windows 11. I’m fortunate in that the only multiplayer game I play is Counter Strike 2, and Valve has a vested interest in making sure that their anticheat works with Linux.
In the past week or so I’ve played Cyberpunk 2077 with AMD FSR4 support, CS2, and GTA IV with the fusion fix mod (this one runs ridiculously better than it did on Windows) via Steam, and Fallout London from GoG through Heroic Launcher. The hardest part of that was just configuring the wine prefix for Fallout London to be the same as the one Fallout 4, since it needs to share a bunch of the original game files. I’ve also got my Epic account hooked up through Heroic Launcher, but haven’t tried any of their games yet. I mostly just have whatever they were giving away for free for the past few years on that service.
Really, gaming on Linux has improved in massive leaps and bounds over the past few years. It is unrecognizable compared to even 5 years ago.


GTA4 (with fusion fix) is a great example of this. Runs like dogshit on my system with Windows 11, runs butter smooth on the same hardware running Fedora 43.


I finally committed to the switch last weekend. My desktop PC was the last holdout still on Windows in my fleet, because of Adobe Lightroom. I decided to just force myself to learn Darktable, and nuked the Win 11 install and replaced it with Fedora 43.
Fun side note, some of my games run way better than they did on Windows, despite not having native Linux builds. lol.


x64-compatible CPUs have been the norm for a very long time now, which is why most modern distros have dropped support for older 32-bit x86-only CPUs. Debian dropped it with Debian 13, so anything based on that - think Ubuntu, Mint, and others, would be in the same boat. 2GB of RAM would be pretty performance-limiting on most modern distros too.
That’s one of the reasons why things like Tiny Core and Puppy exist, though. Specifically for old/slow-by-today’s-standards systems. I haven’t used any of them because I’m not running anything that old, and I quite like modern KDE. I saw an Action Retro video on youtube the other day where he got Tiny Core running on a Pentium 133 with 128MB of RAM, lol.


2004 has my vote. It was a golden age for PC gaming.


Reddit is trash these days


Not a good look.


So then, why’d you make all those bold claims? Dipshit.


Rumor has it their garbage AI thinks they are hacking techniques.


Interesting how it is the cowards hiding behind their masks scanning peoples’ faces.


Absolutely, I’ve never heard anyone say a bad word about him.
I’m also so very glad that cunt McGregor got nowhere with his bid.
Dude, you should review everything. 10/10.


Found a solution on the jellyfin forum: Edit /etc/apt/sources.list.d/jellyfin.sources and replace “jammy” with “noble” in the suites line. Then sudo apt update && apt upgrade and let it rip.


Anyone got problems updating from Jellyfin 10.10.7 on the LXC built on the Proxmox community scripts? Mine is running Ubuntu 22.04 LTS and when I try to upgrade it shows the jellyfin-server package as being kept back. When I dig deeper it says it is because of an unresolved dependency on libicu70. I don’t know how to fix that.
The following packages have unmet dependencies: jellyfin-server : Depends: libicu70 but it is not installable
E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.


He handled the COVID crisis well here too.
This looks to me like a flyer for a class at the local library


Enshittification intensifies
Host based means the printer has no real brains of its own and depends on the computer driving it to do everything. Sort of like the Winmodems of the ‘90s. Feature-reduced cost-cutting.