I did bazzite for an lot of friendsthat are no good at linux and they did really well.
Comment on LLM's despite all the flaws it probably made it easier to switch to Linux.
DoubleDongle@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
Much better source would be asking some Linux guy on Lemmy.
Speaking of that, I recently learned Steam can run Windows games on Linux and now I want to switch. I dual-booted Ubuntu a while back and liked it. What’s a good distro these days? If I just want it to be easy without the ever-expanding baggage of Microsoft, is there a better call than Mint? I know you guys are out there and probably stopping by to chew OP out for asking a LLM for technical advice.
sull@lemmy.ca 13 hours ago
Fokeu@lemmy.zip 13 hours ago
Depends. You have to ask yourself:
Do you prefer stability (fixed release distro) or having cutting-edge software (rolling release distro)?
Do you prefer customizable or idiot proof?
Do you have an Nvidia card? Nvidia is notorious for shitty drivers and anti linux agenda but you have to download their drivers of you are into gaming. Some disros have them by default. You can install them manually on others but I had some issues on fedora, for example.
Are you okay with using an os made by a for-profit corporation? Ubuntu, for example, is maintained by Canonical, a rather controversial company.
Coelacanth@feddit.nu 9 hours ago
If you’re specifically looking for gaming then there are two gaming-focused distros to look at: Bazzite and CachyOS. Former is based on Fedora and latter on Arch, if that makes any difference to you. I’ve heard good things about both.
Do note that Linux doesn’t support kernel-level anti cheat of any kind, so if you want to play any multiplayer games that require this you categorically cannot use Linux, unfortunately.
uienia@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
I chose CachyOS after having benchmarked various games between Windows 10, Bazzite and CachyOS. CachyOs performed the best of the three (not much, but systematically so).
However for users who wants the best ease of use Bazzite is probably the way to go. Steam is pre-installed for example.
DoubleDongle@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Fortunately, the most invasive anti-cheats seem to be popular on games I don’t care for. So far my research has told me I might need to fiddle with Vermintide 2 a little but nothing else I play has it.
mlg@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Probably Fedora, basically modern recommend over Ubuntu and used by Linus himself for being user friendly.
Bazzite is good if you don’t want to mess with traditional linux at all and want something more akin to Android (much harder to screw up).
Mint is great for everything except maybe gaming because their modules aren’t always up to date which can lead to performance issues.
I also think KDE is the better DE to choose, but that’s up to your own preference.
coherent_domain@infosec.pub 13 hours ago
If you want to use a simple setup: single screen, older hardware, and don’t mind minor performance drop in game, the mint is great.
If you want to use a more fancy setup, multiple high DPI screen, or cutting edge hardware, I would try bazzite first.
squaresinger@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
I fear not so. Maybe for easy stuff. But when it comes to actual troubleshooting, Lemmy is severely limited by its tiny user base.
(There’s only about 40k monthly active users on Lemmy, and that number includes bot accounts. For comparison, that’s fewer active users than the Crackberry forum or the LTT forum. Reddit has over a billion of daily active users, so around 25 000x as many as Lemmy.)
Chances are there’s nobody on Lemmy who uses the same hardware, the same distribution and the same DE as me, so if I need help debugging an issue that’s specific to my combination, I’m out of luck.
Even on Reddit the same is true for many issues. While there might be someone with my exact combination who might even know the answer, that person first has to stumble across my post among the millions of posts that are created every hour on Reddit.
So chances are if you ask a deeper question than “How do I copy files” you will not get an answer. Instead you likely will just get snark and “RTFM noob!”
In fact, even though I have been using Linux for well over a decade now, I ran across a problem I couldn’t debug: Games would run fine on my 4070 today, but they’d randomly slow to a crawl (multiple seconds per frame) the next day. I’m a Linux software developer, so I know how to go about this. Reboots and all the usual stuff didn’t help. Logs didn’t show anything relevant. Google didn’t help either. I asked on Stackexchange, but the question was closed as duplicate to an entirely unrelated question. By the time I got it reopened, it was so far down the queue that it didn’t get any answers. Asking on Reddit just got me “Lol, noob, RTFM, works on my machine”-type of answers.
So I bit the bullet after about a year of getting nowhere and asked AI, and the first answer got me to the right track.
Turns out, flatpak keeps its own copy of the Nvidia driver. This version needs to be identical to the system driver version. If it’s not, the GPU isn’t used at all and instead it falls back to software rendering. So if I do
dnf updateand it updates the GPU driver, it breaks the performance. Runningflatpak update && rebootfixes it again. So any time I randnf updatewithoutflatpak update && rebootafter it, it would break the performance. And I often ranflatpak updatefirst.AI reall can help debugging weird issues.