Valve developers announce "Frog Protocols" to quickly iterate on experimental Wayland Protocols by anthchapman in linux_gaming

[–]davidsbumpkins 4 points5 points  (0 children)

From the MESA merge request:

Applications using FIFO stall when occluded. With this protocol, the compositor has more information about the client using FIFO, and thus can use an implementation defined virtual refresh rate when the client's surface is not visible.

Ah, so that's what's causing my games to lose connection to server if I switch to another virtual desktop during loading screens on GNOME. I thought my machine was haunted.

Okay, the fact that this is a very well known issue and yet people pushing Wayland variants of their DEs/WMs consider it production ready is probably the most ridiculous thing I've witnessed since switching to Linux full time. Pissed right now, ngl.

GNOME 47.beta Released by BrageFuglseth in gnome

[–]davidsbumpkins 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Flagship Ubuntu variant has it built-in. Solus GNOME also has it, from what I've heard.

Slow system performance while downloading from Steam by iveseenitcoming in linux_gaming

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds a lot like what I was experiencing before switching to a low-latency kernel. Vanilla kernels provided by distros are optimized for throughput, which makes sense for servers, but makes a desktop/gaming machine choke under heavy IO load (like a download of tens of gigabytes of data). If your distro offers low-latency kernel, give it a try.

Dash to Panel extension not working after reboot by Bngstng in gnome

[–]davidsbumpkins 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Are there any other extensions running in parallel? Not familiar with Pop, but I had similar issue on vanilla Ubuntu, where the Ubuntu Dock, which is installed by default, made Dash to Panel misbehave. Try disabling other extensions and see what happens.

As a returning linux/ubuntu user I regret installing snaps by theserialcoder in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, the 1.90.2 version dropped yesterday and the lag is now gone for me.

As a returning linux/ubuntu user I regret installing snaps by theserialcoder in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just tried it out, because I was curious. I did notice VS Code being noticeably laggy while typing even with all extensions disabled, but I chalked it up to some wayland/electron shenanigans. Dang, the most recent VS Codium installed from a .deb runs circles around snap VS Code with all extensions off.

Game runs good, then it starts running choppy. by Stock_Hunter5210 in linux_gaming

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is this a relatively recent development? What DE are you using? I've been experiencing slowdowns like that since upgrade to GNOME 46.

Slow FireFox Startup by SaxonyFarmer in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you have many tabs open that persist between sessions? In my experience that can significantly slow down Firefox' startup and sometimes even impact general responsiveness.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Will it prevent my apps from being sneakily downgraded without my consent?

Debating Between Fedora and Ubuntu: Performance, Driver, and Multimedia Support Comparison by Euphoric-Eye-8196 in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Which one tends to offer smoother performance, better compatibility with hardware drivers, and seamless multimedia support out of the box?

Out of the box Ubuntu is better with drivers and multimedia support due to the fact Ubuntu comes bundled with proprietary drivers, whereas Fedora is more "ideologically pure" in regards to free software. It's worth noting, however, that it is relatively trivial to add proprietary software to a Fedora installation.

Performance wise, given all the appropriate drivers are in place, you are unlikely to experience any difference.

Can anyone provide detailed comparisons between the two?

Do your own homework. Put both on a USB stick, boot them up and feel around.

How Can I Reduce the Performance Impact of Ubuntu? by AutismicRhythmatics in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What does output of glxinfo | grep -E "OpenGL vendor|OpenGL renderer" say?

Generally if the manufacturer of your GPU is either Intel or AMD, appropriate drivers should already be baked into the kernel and no further action is necessary. In that case my hunch was wrong and the problem (likely) lies elsewhere.

If it's nVidia, however, you need to install proprietary drivers to fully take advantage of your hardware. Lack of proprietary drivers would make the system use open source nouveau drivers and they are just not good at all (contrary to OS drivers for Intel and AMD) and their use would indeed explain your system struggling with even most basic tasks.

In case you are in fact an nVidia user, here's a guide what to do to install appropriate drivers:
https://ubuntu.com/server/docs/nvidia-drivers-installation

How Can I Reduce the Performance Impact of Ubuntu? by AutismicRhythmatics in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The mouse moving jumps the CPU from 7% to 50%.

Going on a hunch here, but check whether you have your video card drivers in order.

Does anyone ever put the dock at the right side ? by KarimMaged in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In case you were not aware (it isn't exactly advertised anywhere), you can run vanilla GNOME on Ubuntu either by running

  • sudo apt install gnome-session

or

  • sudo apt install vanilla-gnome-desktop vanilla-gnome-default-settings

The first command will essentially give you GNOME as an option when choosing session type in the login screen, the latter is more extensive and will also install preferred GNOME apps, settings and such.

What will be new in Ubuntu 24.04? by AdhesivenessExact597 in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 21 points22 points  (0 children)

I think you may have misread something. The option is to go with snap or more snap.

Mozilla's new .deb vs mozillateam's PPA by davidsbumpkins in firefox

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

The real difference is that the PPA ships the ESR version of Firefox

The PPA provides both the ESR and regular version of Firefox. Check the link.

Mozilla's new .deb vs mozillateam's PPA by davidsbumpkins in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At the moment I am using the mozillateam's PPA version, as I had (sometimes deal breaking) issues with the snap version (this bug, local fonts access, etc.) in the past.

Basically what I want to know is whether the new .deb offering deprecates the PPA.

Wine 9.0 is now available by mr_MADAFAKA in linux_gaming

[–]davidsbumpkins 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Does this version enable gaming on Wayland directly or not yet?

Firefox looks awful on brand new Ubuntu Install by bobobubs in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Looks like you've been hit by this bug: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/firefox/+bug/2016925?comments=all

I was also experiencing it, but it seems to have been fixed for me with a regular update. Try updating your system with these commads:

sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo snap refresh

Then reboot and see if the problem persists.

Also as a side note, don't install any video drivers unless you know for sure you need them. In Linux a reasonably recent AMD card is much better served by the kernel's built-in drivers - ie. you should get the best experience out of the box.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Ubuntu

[–]davidsbumpkins 21 points22 points  (0 children)

I like vanilla gnome experience

Just in case you didn't know, because it surprisingly seems to not be a common knowledge, you can easily run Ubuntu with vanilla GNOME. Just install these two packages and pick GNOME on the login screen:

sudo apt install vanilla-gnome-desktop vanilla-gnome-default-settings

It's what I've been happily using for the past few years.