• @[email protected]
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    796 months ago

    I know it’s a joke, I hate to be that guy. But this meme feels old and obsolete now. I can’t remember the last time I had to tweak my Linux. The fun is gone

          • Refurbished Refurbisher
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            6 months ago

            You should consider passing through your Nvidia GPU to a virtual machine in order to do compute tasks on; that way, your host machine won’t be infected with proprietary Nvidia drivers (I’m assuming you need CUDA for your compute tasks). The only performance differences you’ll notice is less available system RAM (you will have access to all of your VRAM), and very slightly less CPU performance, due to running two operating systems at the same time (barely even noticable, TBH). This is the option that I would personally recommend.

            If you want to try a super hacky solution which might not work for everything you need, you can try using the open source, recently released ZLUDA translation layer to perform CUDA tasks on your AMD GPU.

            https://github.com/vosen/ZLUDA

            The reason Hyprland doesn’t work with proprietary Nvidia drivers is due to Nvidia refusing to implement the accepted Wayland standard in favor of their own, home-rolled solution which is incompatible. AFAIK, only GNOME and KDE implement that standard.

            • @[email protected]
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              66 months ago

              Hyprland works fine on Nvidia, I’ve been using it for about a year now. It’s only going to improve now that Nvidia hired people from the Nouveau team to work on Nouveau and Nvidia is making the open drivers the default in version 560. Can’t wait for the 555 drivers they’ve been working on with the Wayland team and most of the major desktops to implement explicit sync etc.

              An option would be to only install the CUDA toolkit without the drivers but distros like Ubuntu just don’t support it. You could also switch display managers to sddm because Hyperland recommends it, might work better. Hyprland prints information in the tty if you launch it with Hyprland. I’m just thinking it’s gdm being weird tbh.

    • @[email protected]
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      56 months ago

      Yeah it just works now. Sometimes I miss the days where we had to troubleshoot sound drivers, because it made us learn so much. Even if we didn’t manage to fix the problem, we learned about how sound works in Linux.

    • UFO
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      46 months ago

      Can i interest you on the deep customization of nixos?

      Jokes aside. I don’t really use the deep patching nix enables. The area of customization i want: look and feel of applications. It’s not something that’s doable really. Desktops are just different ways to launch a web browser T_T

    • JustEnoughDucks
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      26 months ago

      Last week for me lol.

      AMD DRM bug in the kernel that prevents certain 3D rendering or something. Most games through WINE/proton was broken. Had to downgrade the kernel.

      Wouldn’t call that fun as it prevented one of the very few days per month I get to play games with some of my friends

      • @[email protected]
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        26 months ago

        It’s interesting to read people’s issues on Linux. It seems almost all of them come from the graphic stack and gaming. Using an Intel card I haven’t seen an issue in forever.

        • JustEnoughDucks
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          26 months ago

          Yeah I think current graphic development is going at breakneck pace, but of course that means a lot more bugs…