

Free as in freedom, not as in free beer.
Free as in freedom, not as in free beer.
That’s not necessarily the fault of systemd.
No, but the error being hard to debug, and not being able to cancel the timeout as it’s occurring, is though.
Anyway that is been fixed on modern systems
No, I’ve had it happen more recently (I wanna say less than a month ago) with network mounts and random systemd controlled desktop processes that refuse to die.
But I wouldnt turn it on and actually play with it even if I could because I will always take the better performance.
Depends. In Cyberpunk I can get 90-100fps on 1440p on ultra with raytracing on and FSR4 Quality (via Optiscaler). That is a very good experience IMO, to the point that I forget about “framerate” while playing.
That’s Windows though, in Linux the raytracing performance is rather worse for some reason and it slips below the threshold of what I find noticeable, so I go for 1440p native.
bit better RT performance about which I couldn’t care less about.
Yeah raytracing is not really relevant on these cards, the performance hit is just too great.
The RX 9070 XT is the first AMD GPU where you can consider turning it on.
bitcoin mining
That’s a thing of the past, not profitable anymore unless you use ASIC miners. Some people still GPU mine it on niche coins, but it’s nowhere near the scale as it was during the bitcoin and ethereum craze a few years ago.
AI is driving up prices or rather, it’s reducing availability, which then translates into higher prices.
Another thing is that board manufacturers, distributors and retailers have figured out that they can jack up GPU prices above MSRP and enough suckers will still buy them. They’ll sell less volume but they’ll make more profit per unit.
Everybody gangsta until A stop job is running for…
As a user, why should I care whether the distro I use uses systemd?
Um, because as a user you may have to deal with services, or other systemd features?
Let’s say you want to start ssh-agent
when you login to your desktop environment. Well, there’s a systemd service for that that you can enable, and on another distro you’d have to do it another way (autostart script or something).
Counterpoint: To install this program curl ... | sudo bash
Just run DDU bro.
Just run scansfx /now
bro.
Just run oobe\bypassnro
bro.
Just run Chris Titus Tech Tool
bro.
No Linux is too hard bro.
Harmful is just code for “threatens the bottom line of multibillion dollar companies”. There is no relation to anything that matters to real people.
the installer completely shit itself and the screen went black, could not recover from it
I don’t think that this is the standard experience people have. I’ve installed Windows 11 more than a few times for family members and for my gaming pc, and while I find Windows insufferably annoying, black screens were not part of the experience.
weird issues with my rgb and fan control software
That’s the motherboard manufacturers, that’s not on Windows.
All motherboard manufacturer software plain sucks. MSI, Asus, Asrock, Gigabyte … the lot of them. Just don’t install that garbage.
I think 10GbE is more intended for local applications than for internet. Say, you have a NAS with a RAID array of nvme drives for video editing purposes that you want to access from a few workstations.
Even the other day I was quite happy to have 2.5GbE when I installed my new gaming PC, and steam was able to pull all my games directly from my old computer rather than downloading them over the internet again.
Anyway, LAN speeds have always been an order of magnitude higher than common internet speeds, so I don’t see the issue.
My user.js
file is entirely platform independent. I use it on Linux, Windows and even used it on my work provided Macbook. FYI: user.js
only contains the settings you want to change, it’s not the whole prefs.js
file. It’s just 63 lines.
I agree that chrome feels cleaner and needs a lot less fiddling to get right, but chrome is effectively dead for me. I switched to firefox for much more important reasons than a few UI annoyances.
Yes, to completely turn it off, it’s an about:config
setting: extensions.pocket.enabled
Removing it from the toolbar just hides it, but keeps it running.
with every fucking install on every machine. for years.
Multiplied by all the other annoyances you have to turn off, via either gui or about:config
, each and every time. I feel you.
I hop machines fairly frequently, use multiple browsing profiles, and often create discardable profiles, so I eventually just went ahead and spent some time tracing all the about:config
equivalents of the settings that I typically change every time and then put them in a user.js
file that I can just drop into my profile directory.
You can protect yourself from that with airgapping and backups. The bigger issue is probably that it’s becoming increasingly hard to source parts for such old hardware.
You can give me any file, and I can create a compression algorithm that reduces it to 1 bit. (*)
(*) No guarantees about the size of the decompression algorithm or its efficacy on other files
When you run out of characters, you simply create another 0 byte file to encode the rest.
Check mate, storage manufacturers.
Libre (from French) is sometimes used to solve the ambiguity of the word free in the English language, but it sounds kinda awkward in English and there’s certainly no consensus that this should be the official replacement, or that the term free even needs replacement.
Furthermore, the FSF who originally came up with the idea of “free software” still exists and is still called the Free Software Foundation, though Stallman uses both terms interchangeably.