

“Allow”
Fuck you, Microsoft. You and Apple have lost millions of users to Linux, and I’m here for it.


“Allow”
Fuck you, Microsoft. You and Apple have lost millions of users to Linux, and I’m here for it.


Unless they specify Solar, Wind, or Hydrogen, it’s just going to be these assholes building their own coal generators FFS.
Big NOPE


Drivers and such are fine. Performance and such…meh.
They still don’t come close to AMD, and the price isn’t quite distinct enough for people to be drawn from there. Intel is also in the midst of this shakeup with Nvidia injecting cash into the business, and have said they plan to release Intel+Nvidia APU chips to compete with AMD, but that’s not anytime soon.
If they found a good deal on a card, the benchmarks are decisive enough (check Phoronix) at the price point, and they don’t plan on keeping it for 5 years, then sure.
If they find an AMD that is close in price but a great deal more performance, go AMD.


The KVM is the most likely culprit. Remove it from the equation for awhile and see what happens.


What kind of machine is this? If it’s something like an HP/Dell/Lenovo, it may have a boot blocker enabled somehow. It wouldn’t make a whole lot of sense since you managed to install Ubuntu, but they may possibly be creating different types of boot volumes.
You’d normally see a message like “HP Sure Start” at the boot screen, for example.


If you’re ever present or have remote access to her network, make sure sshd is enabled, and try to SSH into it to see what happens.
Q’s:
dmesg output (needs to happen during the event, but the machine is still accessible - hence ssh above)

All of the symptoms described-aside from physical scarring-is very much in line with water boarding as that NK guard mentioned was standard practice. Repeated water boarding causes immense stress on the cardiovascular system, weaking it. It will eventually lead to cardiac events that would not be detectable after time passes without a full autopsy, which they didn’t do. Similar to a human jumping into freezing cold water, your body will just not be able to synchronize breathing and pumping blood properly under this kind of stress. You don’t get used to it.
Repeated over time, this synchronization will eventually be so out of whack, your heart will be damaged, and you’ll have a heart attack or throw a clot. Many whistleblowers talked about this during the last Iraq war. We don’t even know how many people died in Guantanamo because of this exact thing.


GEEEEEE, what a coincidence, eh? Almost like these companies may be coordinating some sort of market shift for some reason.
What do you call that when a bunch of companies responsible for large swathes of market share of a particular good or service use the guise of unnatural market pressure to create conditions unnaturally beneficial to themselves and not consumers?
It’s pretty hard to totally “crash” a running Linux kernel, so understanding some details about what symptoms happened, during, and after (screen freezes, sound stops, mouse stops…etc) would be helpful to discern if this was a kernel thing, or just apps crashing. Almost always ends up being a hardware issue or resource constraint though.
As for game logs and crashing, here are some guides and info:
https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=3287870137 (This shows some debug steps in detail) https://github.com/ValveSoftware/Proton/issues/6650 https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=285102


You don’t. That comment was misinformed. No idea where they heard that from.


We’re all running high performance games through the same thing all the time now. Benchmarks best Windows in most cases.
You’ll be more than fine.


Wine, Bottles, Lutris…etc
Edit: this was a different kind of solution someone else sent me: https://medium.com/@pascalwhoop/how-to-get-lightroom-running-on-linux-with-webassembly-and-nativefier-a69dd9d9f647


First: there is no cheap way to back this amount of data up. AWS Glacier would be about $200/mo, PLUS bandwidth transfer charges, which would be something like $500. R2 would be about $750/mo, no transfer charges. So assume that most companies with some sort of whacky, competing product would be billed by either of these companies with you as a consumer, and you can figure out how this is the baseline of what you’ll be getting charged from them.
50TB of what? If it’s just readily available stuff you can download again, skip backing that up. Only keep personal effects, and see how much you can reduce this number by.
I got it working under both Wine and Bottles for someone that needed it, but it was a real pain in the ass, and the reports on actually successfully doing so are hit or miss.
Found this solid write up on various options and results though, which sounds like it could be helpful for you while investigating: https://gist.github.com/eylenburg/38e5da371b7fedc0662198efc66be57b


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It all is if you’re getting both. You’re sharing IPs with many different devices at the same time. That’s how it works.
Read up on it.


25% of what?
1/4 of 100% of what?
I’ve seen zero RISC devices in the wild, and the phrasing here wants me to think I should have by now.


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Looks like you’re hosting a mostly static frontend there. Could be hosting that for free in a number of places, and then you’d have no problem.