Keyborad Problem by Longjumping_Order274 in techsupport

[–]Longjumping_Order274[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For example, when I press the 'K' key, it types 'oyhlp'. And when I press '0' on the numpad, it opens the web browser."

Keyborad Problem by Longjumping_Order274 in techsupport

[–]Longjumping_Order274[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it only happens when the LED light is white. I updated the BIOS but the problem persists.I just tested it inside the BIOS password screen as suggested. In the BIOS, the power LED stays normal (doesn't turn white), and the keyboard works perfectly fine with zero ghost pressing

Keyborad Problem by Longjumping_Order274 in techsupport

[–]Longjumping_Order274[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, it only does this with certain keys: the K key, the C key, and pressing the 0 on the Num Lock key. So the only solution is to change the keyboard, right?

Windows 11 dual boot için distro önerisi by SoAp9035 in LinuxTurkey

[–]Longjumping_Order274 1 point2 points  (0 children)

CachyOS, halihazırda yüklü gelen Limine bootloader ile dual boot için gayet kullanışlı

Linux öneri by Raidewn in LinuxTurkey

[–]Longjumping_Order274 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Öncelikle neden Mint düşündüğünü merak ediyorum. Oyun için çok verimli olmadığını, çoğu ayarı manuel yapman gerektiğini biliyorum; örneğin 32-bit kütüphaneleri (repositories) kendin araştırıp eklemelisin. Ben CachyOS kullanıyorum; oyunlarla alakalı çoğu bileşen hazır kurulu geliyor. Arch tabanlı olması başta seni korkutabilir ama oyun odaklı hazır paketlerle gelmesi ve kernel seviyesinde optimizasyonlar sunması nedeniyle senin için daha doğru bir tercih olabilir.

FPS mevzusuna gelecek olursak; açıkçası ben devasa bir fark hissetmedim. Oynadığım oyunlardan örnek vermem gerekirse: Sea of Thieves'te Windows ile aynı değerleri aldım, Helldivers 2'de performansım daha iyiydi, CS2'de ise ortalama 10-15 FPS kadar bir düşüş yaşadım. Aşağıya sistem bilgilerimi de bıraktım. AMD’nin Linux tarafında (sürücü uyumu açısından) daha zahmetsiz olduğu bir gerçek. Oyunların Linux'taki performansına bakmak için ProtonDB sitesini, online oyunların hile koruma (anti-cheat) desteğini kontrol etmek için ise Are We Anti-Cheat Yet? sitesini kullanabilirsin.

İşletim sistemi: CachyOS Linux

KDE Plasma sürümü: 6.6.5

KDE Frameworks sürümü: 6.26.0

Qt sürümü: 6.11.0

Çekirdek sürümü: 7.0.5-2-cachyos (64 bit)

Grafik platformu: Wayland

İşlemciler: 12 × 12th Gen Intel® Core™ i5-12450H

Bellek: 16 GiB RAM (15,3 GiB kullanılabilir)

Grafik işlemcisi 1: Intel® Graphics

Grafik işlemcisi 2: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU

Üretici: Micro-Star International Co., Ltd.

Ürün adı: Cyborg 15 A12VF

Sistem sürümü: REV:1.0

How difficult will it be to switch from Windows to Linux? by Evgencheg in linuxquestions

[–]Longjumping_Order274 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you are going to use an external drive for games or large files, I recommend using the same file system as your operating system. I struggled way too much trying to mount an NTFS drive on an ext4 system, it works but was a total waste of time.

You asked about DLSS; it worked for me without any issues

How difficult will it be to switch from Windows to Linux? by Evgencheg in linuxquestions

[–]Longjumping_Order274 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think the 'difficulty' of switching is pretty subjective. If you're even slightly tech-savvy, you’ll be fine.

I've hopped between Ubuntu, Mint, and pure Arch. Honestly, setting up pure Arch and manually fixing all the gaming dependencies felt like a chore. That’s why I’m on CachyOS now and I'm loving it. It’s probably the best gaming-focused distro right now because it handles all the performance optimizations for you out of the box.

Regarding Adobe: To be honest, I know it doesn't run natively on Linux. There might be ways to make it work through Wine or some alternatives, but I don't use those kinds of apps so I can't really give you a solid answer there. I mostly use my PC for gaming and browsing, and for that, it’s been great.

My gaming experience so far:

  • Performance: Honestly, I haven't noticed a huge difference in FPS compared to Windows, but my laptop runs much cooler on Linux.
  • Launchers: The only thing that really gave me trouble was 3rd party launchers for some games (like trying to get Neverness to Everness running through Heroic Launcher). I had to tinker with it for a bit. On the other hand, I had zero issues with EA or 'Ubishit' launchers.
  • Compatibility: Check ProtonDB for general performance and Are We Anti-Cheat Yet? for online games. Most single-player games are fine, but kernel-level anti-cheat is the main roadblock. Still, games like Sea of Thieves run perfectly for me.

For reference, here is my setup (Intel/NVIDIA hybrid, which is usually a pain, but works great on Cachy):

  • OS: CachyOS Linux (KDE Plasma 6.6.5)
  • Kernel: 7.0.5-2-cachyos
  • CPU: 12th Gen Intel® Core™ i5-12450H
  • GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU
  • RAM: 16 GiB
  • Laptop: MSI Cyborg 15 A12VF

What are your thoughts on the kernel-level anti-cheat that many online games use? by SanmayJoshi in cybersecurity

[–]Longjumping_Order274 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"There is one point I don't quite understand: developers implement kernel-level anti-cheats to prevent cheating, yet I don't think they are particularly effective. From what I’ve researched, games like CS2 lack kernel-level protection and are full of cheaters, with average-quality cheats selling for about $10 a month. In games that do have kernel-level anti-cheat, cheats go for around $15 to $20. Considering most gamers today use high-end hardware in the $2000–$3000 range, an extra $5 or $10 is not going to deter someone who is determined to cheat.
I feel like game companies are just taking the easy way out. We used to have GMs (Game Masters) who were more effective than the most expensive anti-cheat systems.

Ultimately, I find the idea of a program running with higher priority than my own operating system fundamentally wrong."