I’m on Nobara. I doubt that the distro is the source of the issue.
I’m on Nobara. I doubt that the distro is the source of the issue.
I DECLARE… VARIABLE!
By default, I don’t think so, but you can install gamescope and that supports Wayland.
I just meant you can have an internal fan that’s larger than your heatsink, and a shroud to direct the airflow to it. It requires less vertical space, but more horizontal space.
You can use a larger fan and a shroud to redirect the air flow, similar to how laptops are cooled.
Y’all are coming here trying to turn Lemmy into Reddit.
yeet cap rn
It’s right there!
I haven’t seen too many positives regarding Radeon on Linux
Funny you say that, because Linux users have a lot of hate for Nvidia due to its poor support and closed-source drivers, and lots of love for AMD with it’s great support and open source drivers.
AMD GPU’s are literally plug-and-play in Linux.
If you’re on GrapheneOS, you get the option to block an app’s network access when you install it. So you can use whatever keyboard you want and it can’t call home.
Try manually selecting the latest version of Proton in the game’s compatibility settings, currently 8.0-3. That fixed the issue for me.
Higher refresh rates make a bigger difference when physically larger portions of the screen are changing at once, and when there’s fast movement on the screen. That’s why it has a more noticeable effect on FPS games, where the entire screen changes when you move the mouse, and when you want to quickly move your aim to specific points. It’s much more noticeable on a large display than it is on a phone screen, for example.
Keep your games on an NTFS disk or partition, and both OSes can access it.
In a GUI, your options are human-readable and all presented to you. In a terminal, you have to know the names of the programs/commands. It’s not a big deal for something like Notepad or vim, but it gets more complicated when you don’t know the name of what you’re looking for. It’s easier to remember the which program you need when you have a list and icons. You can do all the same things, but a GUI is much more intuitive for the majority of people.
The only native games I’ve tried are Ark: Survival Evolved, Hollow Knight, Slay the Spire, and Borderlands 2, and they all played flawlessly.
Has anyone else seen the issue where clicking on the menus at the top of the window will open the menu on another monitor?
It doesnt let you “ungroup” windows on the task bar
Sure it does. Right click the taskbar, go into the Taskbar settings, and there’s a dropdown called “Combine taskbar buttons” with an option to never combine.
I think the main issue of your comment was that you may be mistaking what redundant means.
I’m running Ubuntu, and gaming on it has been as simple as installing Steam via apt and having it download my games. I haven’t yet found a game I own that won’t run.
And FSR also works on non-AMD hardware, which is pretty neat.
Many places have laws in place currently stating that you can’t be personally identified by your IP. So if you get emails about piracy and copyright issues coming from a law firm representing rightsholders, the best course of action is usually to ignore them. Responding to them is essentially admitting that you’re the person they’re looking for and that you committed the offense in question.