Why no arch install?
Why no arch install?
Also, the few points others are talking about needing others, there’s a group-finder and I’d say most people running those raids in group finder groups don’t talk at all, so you can just pretend they’re NPCs if you want.
I will never get tired of comedy responses to photoshop requests. It’s just a timeless classic.
Been 100% linux for like 6-9 months now, these stories make me thankful for finally making the switch.
I’ve tried to make the switch 3-4 times in the past and was stopped by 2 main things:
The experience was so much better this time and I really have no regrets. I don’t imagine I’ll ever run Windows again outside of a VM
Nah. There are some nvidia issues with wayland (that are starting to get cleared up), and nvidia’s drivers not being open-source rubs some people the wrong way, but getting nvidia and cuda up and running on linux is pretty easy/reliable in my experience.
WSL is a bit different but there are steps to get that up and running too.
Agree with others, this guide is a bit more work than you probably need. I don’t really run windows much anymore but I did have an easier time with WSL like the other poster mentioned.
And just to check, are you planning on fine-tuning a model? If so then the whole anaconda / miniconda, pytorch, etc… path makes sense.
But if you’re not fine-tuning and you just want to run a model locally, I’d suggest ollama. If you want a UI on top of it, open-webui is great.
Hopefully you’re only forwarding the minimal set of network ports and not all ports/traffic? If so then you’re good, like someone else said if you’ve got a router and it’s forwarding selected traffic then no need for anything else
Tons of remote jobs out there, probably a higher percentage for startup jobs. Most remote places will have people in different time zones and some sort of core hours they expect people to be in, but having some discussion you’ll probably be able to find one that’s accommodating.
One good site to start looking:
Good luck
Drop.com, Amazon, AliExpress, BangGood
Yeah, I’d definitely try just booting windows as is. Windows should detect change in hardware and simply pick the right drivers for the new system / hardware. If you go into device manager you can enable “show all devices”which will show the old hardware, you can remove those devices if you want but even that isn’t necessary/required
And what about Dr Pepper Brisket?
Bets on what percentage of users on that site have that exact regex string as their password? 10%?
Comedy answer: this is one of those sites that doesn’t let 2 people use the same password so it’s only 1 person
Elon “Nick Cannon” Musk
Seems like arch gets KDE into stable within a couple days of release generally. Or there’s the kde-unstable repo that already has it
Synology nas are nice. I will say there’s definitely a nice UI there and they generally work well. But there is a good bit of lock-in and there are some really reasonable roll-your-own hardware and software options these days.
If you want something that just works, doesn’t need to be super configurable and is easiest to set up and manage, get a synology. If you don’t mind putting in some work or if you need to really tweak some stuff, roll your own
It’s the best way to keep everyone calm with all those guns around
How does one train a cat to make waffles? Asking for a friend
Most steam games just work. Make sure to go to settings and compatibility and let it use compatibility for all games. Look at something like bottles for a front-end to let you set up and use wine / proton for other launchers, etc….
You’ve never seen a scaly manfish show somebody their downstairs mixup? Have you never been fishing?
I’ve been tempted to try and install plasma mobile on a tablet.