the penguin migration was going just fine, until nvidia 570.124.04 dropped, which is when the misery started. :|
Got to check if I can roll back to earlier version.
Hint: :q!
Sister communities:
Community rules (click to expand)
1. Follow the site-wide rules
sudo
in Windows.Please report posts and comments that break these rules!
Important: never execute code or follow advice that you don't understand or can't verify, especially here. The word of the day is credibility. This is a meme community -- even the most helpful comments might just be shitposts that can damage your system. Be aware, be smart, don't remove France.
the penguin migration was going just fine, until nvidia 570.124.04 dropped, which is when the misery started. :|
Got to check if I can roll back to earlier version.
Linux is super reliable, and unless you use cutting edge distro, it's pretty rare than anything breaks. Even Fedora is pretty stable from experience
The only true problems I ever had (and still has), were with Nvidia. And switching distros ain't saving you. Linux mint? Breaks on suspend. Nobara? Memory leak. Trying newer versions to see if it fixes it? Where's my bootloader...
I do understand that laptop RTX 3070 are not common, but still. I just want it to work, and have cuda on it. Is that too much to ask?
unless you use cutting edge distro
yea well, "arch btw". Haven't had issues really, been running it for years on other systems but my gaming pc with nvidia is the only one with issues... because of course it does. :D
Of course. Mileage may vary. On some systems it may always work, on others it's "what's broken this week".
word. some devices just have angry machine spirits which just can't be pleased.
Have you tried feeding them your youngest children?
haven't forked, no children. will neighbour's do?
Good idea. Try and report back. If it does not work, sorry!
Games and especially modding. I'm holding on to 10 until I can't. Then i'll figure out Linux.
tip: Windows 10 21h2 IoT Enterprise LTSC is supported until 2032
Honestly Windows 11 isn't terrible. It is mostly the same as Windows 10 except more demanding for seemingly no reason.
I've tried it a couple times and I hate it. The UI sucks, I can't find shit, and they've stripped back control panel even further. Tried to help my mother with virtual disc's and you can't simply mount them anymore, instead there was some strange 3rd-party tool I'd never heard of and it didn't even export files that were too deep in the folder tree. Fucking useless.
All the bloatware sucks, search defaulting to AI and Bing instead of your own computer sucks. Removing administrative controls sucks.
But I'm a visual designer and the market needs powerful industry-ready software like Adobe and Affinity. I can't design publishing in fucking GIMP. The Linux alternatives aren't enough. I'm considering using a Linux home machine with Mac for work but the apps I own already are Microsoft so it would be very expensive to switch. So I'll probably end up using W11 and just complain the whole time.
For the most basic casual PC gamer SteamOS will be a game changer once they add more hardware support for it.
You mean Nvidia hardware. Nvidia purposefully sucks overall on Linux. Don't reply with "mine works great" because you're lying or haven't had an issue yet. Fuck Nvidia.
This keeps getting brought up, but the reality is that there is nothing special about SteamOS 3. If people want a SteamOS-like OS (Immutable, Steam/Proton integrated, Steam Big Picture as Primary interface), then it already exists. Chimera, Bazzite, probably others. The only thing Valve could realistically improve on is the installation experience.
SteamOS's only real advantage is that it is hardware restricted. Valve is able to test against a narrow field of hardware and insure a high degree of stability because of it.
No, it's not. And I say that as an almost-exclusively Linux users since at least 20 years.
What do you mean? My computer has never had Windows installed on it, so the end of Windows 10 support doesn't affect me at all. I'm not sure what could be more simple than that.
Linux and Windows are different beasts entirely. Linux is perfect for some but needlessly complex and hard to support for others.
Iโm in the middle of moving, but once Iโm set up Iโm going to look into dual booting. Iโm not sure Iโll 100% be able to get rid of windows, though. For a start, Iโve heard NVIDIA is a nightmare on Linux and Iโve only recently got a new computer so i donโt really want to buy more hardware.
Hopefully dual booting will allow me to experiment and try alternatives for software which doesnโt have a Linux version, and i hear that one of the things that chatbots are actually good at is diagnosing and fixing Linux issues. So Iโm hopeful, but Iโm not assuming itโll be entirely painless.
The Nvidia open-source driver situation has been improving. Supposedly Valve has been working with them on it alongside their ARM support.
You can also try your hand with the closed source drivers but ymmv.
At work we run some software that while you can get it to run under Linux it's not worth the effort even for me to bother.
One supplier is slowly moving towards the runtime being available on BSD at least. They also somewhat decoupled from visual studio in the latest release, while still being mandatory still it's a step in the right direction.