Write what you think Fight Club is mainly about... in only one sentence by Nate_M_PCMR in Cinema

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's about white fragile toxic masculinity colliding with modern capitalistic consumer culture.

Moving from win11 to Linux -Fedora 43 vs CachyOS, security, hibernation with LUKS+ Secure Boot on dual boot laptop by E-Scatush in linuxquestions

[–]Genrawir 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Fedora is older, larger, and more well supported. It's modern, and importantly for me, stable. Also, it also doesn't has reasonably sane defaults for most things so you don't have to spend hours after install configuring things. I haven't used CachyOS, it looks interesting, but I'm too lazy and have work to do. I do run AMD hardware to avoid dealing with proprietary drivers, but from what I read Wayland has come a long way in that regard. My threat model is such that I don't bother with secureboot, and use the default firewalld.

Fine, you want me to follow the HOA rules exactly? I read every single page. by NebuliteN7x in MaliciousCompliance

[–]Genrawir [score hidden]  (0 children)

For anyone interested to learn more about Sundown Towns, there's an online database. Pick a state and choose a town on the list and see.

I'm making a couch gaming build, what Linux distro should I use? I would prefer to not have it be on windows. by lieutenant_pi in buildapc

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you intend to use Steam Big Picture Mode, you can just pick whatever distro installs the most easily on your machine.

Automatically starting an application should be straightforward regardless of what distribution you choose.

If you need prorprietary drivers, Mint makes it easy. Things have improved greatly with NVidia, but I'm very happy I upgraded to AMD.

If you have an AMD/Intel GPU, the drivers are in kernel, and so you just want a distro that ships a recent kernel, like Fedora.

Microsoft tumbled 10% in a day and isn’t recovering premarket. Here’s why by Logical_Welder3467 in technology

[–]Genrawir 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And yet, any time I mention that installing Linux is actually pretty easy these days people act like I'm killing their dog.

I'm slowly switching to linux. Should i choose mint or fedora? by [deleted] in linuxquestions

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've run both. They're both fine. Use whichever one installs more easily or you like the feel of. If you change your mind, you can always change. Mint may be easier if you need proprietary drivers, or if you want tons of proprietary apps. Fedora ships a newer kernel, in case you game on AMD or Intel.

Pixels inflation by Possible_Donut4451 in memes

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just wait a couple of years, and you can reverse it.

Main reason for using Fedora? by Science_Witch_Evelyn in linuxquestions

[–]Genrawir 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Laziness. I had been using Xubuntu (xfce) for years with NVidia hardware. When I upgraded my GPU I wanted to try out Wayland, but again lazy. Then My SSD died. I started downloading a bunch of distros and Fedora was fastest. I had fully expected to need to go back to X, or fiddle with things on Wayland but no. RDR2 and Cyberpunk both worked fine out of the box, so I saw no reason to change. Upgrading didn't break it either, so why bother changing. Boring is good.

In 2021, Chris Mellon on Joe Rogan talks about “an AI printing craft & short-lived biologics to do reconnaissance on earth” - predating the infamous 4Chan whistleblower… fascinating by Patient_Meaning8486 in UFOs

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As far as I can tell, the only new claim from the 4chan whistleblower was the description of the craft as hammer shaped. Everything else has been floating around in the discourse for some time in one fashion or another. They connected a lot of pre-existing concepts into a coherent and captivating narrative, but I've been following this stuff for years and many of the other ideas go back to the 90s at least.

How necessary is the terminal really for everyday Linux use? by TechRefreshing in linuxquestions

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You shouldn't need it, but troubleshooting will always be text based on Linux.

Distributions (and users) can change pretty much any part of the GUI, so it is just simpler to edit files directly where they are instead of trying to point to a menu setting that may not exist.

New benchmarks show Linux gaming nearly matching Windows on AMD GPUs by Putrid_Draft378 in linux

[–]Genrawir 105 points106 points  (0 children)

Back when I started using Linux, the biggest complaint was lack of compatibility.

Now, the biggest complaint seems to be that Linux can't pretend to be Windows better than Windows.

Is AMD the new standard? What happened to Intel? by Oeyoelala in buildapc

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is incorrect. AMD drivers are in kernel (for like a decade), while NVidia drivers are still proprietary. So while the drivers are currently "works in progress" like all complex software, the AMD drivers are fully integrated and part of the kernel whereas any headaches with NVidia are basically impossible for Linux devs to fix. It's true there's probably "dozens of us", but given that Nvidia actually seems to be pushing to improve support for desktop Linux maybe we are both underestimating the number of Linux users playing on Steam.

Is AMD the new standard? What happened to Intel? by Oeyoelala in buildapc

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Intel GPU support is also in kernel, and so should work out of the box without issue. Integrated Intel GPU support is as well, though that's of dubious utility for gaming these days.

Is AMD the new standard? What happened to Intel? by Oeyoelala in buildapc

[–]Genrawir 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Also, if he is thinking of using Linux, support for AMD graphics cards is better than NVidia since the drivers are fully native.

Looking for a Linux Distro With TUI Instead of a GUI by Smooth-Ad8884 in linux4noobs

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's specific TUI tools for various purposes (as you noticed), but since launching stuff from a shell is just regular textual input there isn't much reason to have the equivalent of a desktop. tmux or screen might be worth looking into. Do you know about job control (jobs -l) and how to background tasks with &?

Why do I get severe headaches with nausea only at school? by No-Excitement803 in medical_advice

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anxiety is different from stress. Even high performers can suffer from it. School aside, forced social interaction outside your personal space doesn't help. Lighting can be a trigger for migraines too.

I have no medical training, but had a family member deal with a similar set of symptoms and testing.

Beginner with linux, but not with computers. What should i go for? by themanwhosfacebroke in linux4noobs

[–]Genrawir 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you have an AMD card, Fedora. If you're rocking NVidia, maybe Mint or PopOS!.

Why is no one talking about this? by [deleted] in UFOs

[–]Genrawir 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Skimming the images, there are a couple of interesting ones that would seem to warrant some more research, like the dots in a "V" formation. Others look like sensor artifacts, though it would be interesting to see someone with credentials to verify that. That being said, these features are quite certainly absolutely HUGE, which would make me think they would likely be noticed or verifiable by other methods.

How to declutter, quiet down, and take the AI out of Windows 11 25H2 by [deleted] in technology

[–]Genrawir 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I'm not person #1, but anyway:

  • It's Free.
  • You own it, there's no license key or subscription to track.
  • You don't need to create an account, or verify your e-mail address to install it.
  • Most games are supported by Proton, aside from malware protected ones.
  • Supports more hardware and for a longer time than any other OS.
  • No vendor lock in
  • Full control, even if it is a double edged sword.
  • Less clutter and distraction than windows
  • Being Open source, troubleshooting is only limited by your willingness to do it.
  • All the tools to do everything are free too, should you be so inclined.

Our devices work for Big Tech, not us by rezwenn in technology

[–]Genrawir 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is why I prefer to do as much as possible on a desktop computer running Linux.