30y/o with chronic fibro here too, the OG deck is nice but thinking about getting the OLED because it’s lighter, I use mine primarily for playing OSRS or Elden ring. Also lots of hockey!
Do you find it’s too heavy for long periods of time?
30y/o with chronic fibro here too, the OG deck is nice but thinking about getting the OLED because it’s lighter, I use mine primarily for playing OSRS or Elden ring. Also lots of hockey!
Do you find it’s too heavy for long periods of time?
MANGOHUD comes with steamOS so you just pass those flags to launcher options, it should work, if you want to see the HUD just remove ,nodisplay=0
Try using mangohud to cap it, I set it at 35fps cap running on high/med settings with something like MANGOHUD=1 MAHGOHUD_OPTIONS=fps_limit=35,nodisplay=0
Make sure to disable the steam frame limiter and allow tearing (helps with input).
Yep I was trying to remember, it’s been a long time since I used it!
LXD is to LXC what Podman or Distrobox is to Docker (if I’m correct, it’s just a convenient wrapper that does extra bits/builds on LXC)
AKA compiling them yourself or baking them into the kernels or using DKMS :)
Pretty much nailed it
I agree, some of us just want a simple init system that isn’t millions of lines of code and to be able to pick our own parts to use in a UNIXY fashion - If it ain’t broke why fix it…
For example on my alpine system I have acpid, crond, dhcpcd, openntpd, seatd, udev, wpa_supplicant as services that systemd would replace.
Piggybacking off your comment I’ve been using SFOS as a daily driver for the past couple of years and while not perfect, it does work pretty well, somewhat of an ecosystem and it runs android apps pretty flawlessly. The UI is beautiful! If you want to get away from iOS/Android it’s a decent choice.
Some parts are closed-source tho (UI secret sauce, some Jolla apps etc). The vast majority of it is open-source though and I trust the Finnish spiritual successor to maemo/nokia a lot more than a megacorp.
This doesn’t sound like a non-systemd problem, more likely something related to Void.
Yep alpine is lovely. Minimal, no bullshit.
Systemd is an init system (the first process that manages/runs everything else). However it does far more than a traditional init system; arguably it’s tendrils are all over mainstream Linux now.
GLIBC is the GNU Project’s implementation of the C standard library. It is a wrapper around system calls of the kernel for application use.
more akin to BSD with the introduction of system
One difference: BSDs are coherent.
Systemd is bloat, was somewhat forced upon Linux, took over critical projects (udev et al), huge attack surface, shit tooling (binary logs), not really modular in the sense of portability, not just an init system (behemoth).
Used both of these for years and years, no issues.