

Lol, not sure why a “thank you” got downvoted
Lol, not sure why a “thank you” got downvoted
I’m not a KDE user, is it possible to have the upper bar all the way up without showing the wallpaper above?
Got it, the performance in the the TB4 for eGPU isn’t very good, with a degradation of 30% or more in some cases
This may help “How to Use Steam on Linux (Some Hacking Required)”
https://spectra.video/videos/watch/06cb0ef3-9944-477c-8efa-725ad228ff53
Via TB4? If I’m not mistaken Oculink eGPU adapter is only possible with the Framework 16. It may worth waiting to perhaps get the new Arrow Lake with a discrete TB5
Hey, funny that you mentioned the Thinkpad. I’m between getting a Thinkpad and the Framework 13. Would you perhaps share things that for your personal preference were downsides in the Thinkpad?
Is this kind of an alternative to Stremio?
Agree. I was just pointing that since I’m out of the scene I can’t have an opinion.
I can’t have an impression good or bad about this news. I’m not sure if Rust is an interesting thing. I saw people saying good things about it and other talking hellish about the number of dependencies.
I don’t program for a long time. Used to like coding in C quite a lot.
The idea is the opposite, to not rely in MS for Secure Boot. True that they created the secure boot but not because they created that is a bad idea. Many Linux distributions support Secure Boot through their own signing keys or by using tools like Shim (Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian, OpenSuse, Arch, Gentoo and NixOS), allowing us to maintain control and security without depending on Microsoft. Secure Boot is a security feature that ensures your computer boots only trusted software, reducing the risk of malware. It checks the signatures of boot software and only allows signed, trusted components to load. This helps protect your system from unauthorized access during startup. Not flawless but is better with than without. Also, along with other strategies it may some day be used by the gaming vendors as a potential via to validate anti cheat. Recently the systemd made some progress in the area enhancing the TPM config.
https://lwn.net/Articles/1001730/
“the TPM PCRs could be used either to lock a disk-encryption key to only be used on kernels signed by a particular OS vendor, or to lock a disk-encryption key to specific local things, such as the firmware version, available hardware, etc. Now, with systemd 257, the user can configure both these kinds of requirements at once.”
Genuine question, doesn’t PopOS requires to disable secure boot to install? Not a big fan of distros that request it
Nice! I wonder if Rust was considered
Agree. Asus never really put much of an effort to support Linux, for example, for the big companies, fwupd, we only see Dell and Lenovo support.
No workaround as far as I’m aware. Commenting to follow others comments to learn if something changed in this area
There are some rumors about a new android box made by Valve. Perhaps if you have the benefit of time wait a little bit to see if it sees the daylight
Fwupd is the way to go, I’m actually checking the device lists that are supported by it to get new laptops going forward
I wonder if zero RPM is supported for Nvidia cards as well
If there is one thing to criticize is the need to install Gnome Software. I’d prefer that this was available in the KDE Discover.
Not defending Ubuntu but wasn’t this clarified to be Mozilla’s deploying it via Snap and requesting to remove the apt installation?
Source: https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2022/04/how-to-install-firefox-deb-apt-ubuntu-22-04