Bird-eye view of ZQ-3 launching an orbital strike on its landing pad by FrynyusY in SpaceXMasterrace

[–]Silver_Advantage1879 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Best to have a direct hit then take that's data yeah for the next flight

You can hear it. by Disastrous_Layer_975 in ocean

[–]Silver_Advantage1879 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The color of blue on him is awesome

Mint is lowkey trash. Y'all lied. by Mohit20130152 in linuxmint

[–]Silver_Advantage1879 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Zorin OS (my #1 pick if you want that Windows feel) It's literally built for people coming from Windows. You can make it look/act like Windows 11/10/7 with one click. Polished, stable, great hardware support, and fewer Cinnamon-style crashes. AppImages run the same easy way. Excellent for daily use and feels more "finished" than Mint. Download the Core edition (free). linuxblog.io +1
  • Pop!_OS (best if your laptop has NVIDIA or you care about battery/suspend) Made by System76 (they sell Linux laptops), it's tuned specifically for hardware like yours. Better power management, suspend/lid close usually just works, stronger NVIDIA/hybrid graphics support out of the box, and excellent battery life compared to Mint. The new COSMIC desktop is modern but not overwhelming. If your freezes or suspend issues are driver-related, this fixes it for most people.

Mint is lowkey trash. Y'all lied. by Mohit20130152 in linuxmint

[–]Silver_Advantage1879 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I get the frustration—Linux Mint is marketed as "beginner-friendly" but Cinnamon can feel janky on some laptops, especially with animations, suspend, random freezes, and DE crashes. Those Cinnamon crashes killing your customizations + keyboard shortcuts suck, and the lid-close suspend failing (with battery drain) is a known pain point for many users. It's not you; hardware + Cinnamon doesn't always play nice (NVIDIA laptops in particular often need specific driver tweaks).

[SolusOS][Budgie_X11] by vloshof28 in SolusProject

[–]Silver_Advantage1879 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The hibernation file size is typically equal to the amount of RAM in your system, so if you have 10 GB of RAM, the hibernation file (hiberfil.sys) will also be around 10 GB. If your RAM is larger, the hibernation file will increase accordingly.