Flatpaks are a lot easier than appimages though I still default to my distros native packages if available.
Flatpaks are a lot easier than appimages though I still default to my distros native packages if available.
I usually go for incredibly inhumanly muscley male characters but occasionally play as a woman for variety.
PopOS and Manjaro are two I never liked.
No that is a stereo mic lead, hence the two rings.
I chose India and I pay with a UK debit card SK can’t see why US would be any different. Only needed the VPN for signup.
At this point I’m waiting for the them to put a stop to my VPNed price of £1.81 for a family plan but they keep allowing it.
OpenSUSE TW for me. Used to be Arch but it’s just too much faff for me.
Hours to complete is such an odd measure of value. I'd rather have a 10 hour experience I loved than a tedious 100 hour experience.
I gave up with pipewire and just switched to pulseaudio. All issues gone.
Pipewire doesn’t work in games for me so I switched back to Pulse. No issues since.
AMD is marginally easier but Nvidia is a lot better than people make out. The drivers install with one command in most distros.
Pipewire came installed by default on my OpenSUSE TW install and I never get audio in games. I have to constantly switch audio devices until it finally decides to work. I swapped it out for pulseaudio and I’ve never had an issue since.
Pipewire is really buggy for me so I just use pulseaudio.
Are people regularly opening Microsoft Office documents? I don’t think I’ve touched one since I was at school, which I finished in 2012.
Most laptops come with an empty SATA or NVME drive.
I’d left Steam open downloading games and then noticed it had completely frozen.
Last time I used Arch it lasted about 20 minute before crashing and then failing to boot. I really can’t be bothered with that sort of OS on my PC.
I’ve done Arch a couple of times but don’t care to ever do it again to be honest. Maybe I’ll try Gentoo one day.
I installed Arch last week and it crashed within hours and then refused to boot due to an fstab issue. I switched to openSUSE and haven’t had any issues.
Out of curiosity, why not go for something that supports Linux out of the box? Why stock to mainstream?