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kbin.life

FlyingSquid , to lemmyshitpost in Bleh
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Mind blown.

shy_mia , to linux in Switching back to Windows. For now.

Aside from some notable examples, I’ve had great luck with gaming on Linux. Wayland’s still rough (thanks Nvidia) but it’s not that big of an issue; general usage is fine and development is fantastic.

There is only one issue when it comes to games…
I have a VR setup…

Sam_Bass , to memes in Virgin nihilism vs Chad absurdism

Everything matters. Just because you cant see or feel dont foist it on those of us who can

P4ulin_Kbana ,

True…

dunz OP ,
@dunz@feddit.nu avatar

No, it does not. The universe does not exist for a reason, and neither do you. It just is. Trying to find a true meaning is futile.

Sam_Bass ,

Maybe to you halfblind darkness lovers. I live in a world of light where everything is apparent to any who want it to be. No faith needed to excuse the shadows that the light draws on the earth

dunz OP ,
@dunz@feddit.nu avatar

The fact that there isn’t meaning is liberating. It means I am free to do whatever I like, because the universe doesn’t care. Even though, the universe is full of wonder and beauty, but it just is. It exists for no reason? I think that makes it even more wonderful

flerp ,

You’re conflating subjective and objective. Just because things subjectively matter to you (they also subjectively matter to most nihilists as well) doesn’t mean they objectively matter. That’s where the distinction lies.

samus12345 ,
@samus12345@lemmy.world avatar

Needs clarification - nothing intrinsically matters. But things do matter to people.

LaunchesKayaks , to asklemmy in What is an event that altered you in some way?
@LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world avatar

Negative experience: got half my face ripped off by a dog as a kid. I’m scared of almost all dogs now and I panic around heelers.

Positive experience: going to college. I’m considerably successful because I decided to go on a whim lol.

cashmaggot OP ,

Hope you're doing okay and face is healed up as much as you want it to be. Tbh, dogs freak me out too. Which is a shame, because I dig them in theory. But in actuality, I am not really here for two of the major pets of this world. Which is a shit situation to be in, and I can't even imagine how shit it must be now that everyone's out here taking their dogs around everywhere. I hope you've got some solid help =/!

Get that college money =)! It's big. You know, idk if you're family promoted it or anything but it really does seem to be the secret to stability. I mean, you might not be a Rockefeller. But it really does help expand your chances for a better life.

LaunchesKayaks ,
@LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world avatar

Thank you for the encouragement.

One of the best child plastic surgeons happened to be in town when I got attacked and he took my case. Can’t even tell anything happened. He did a GREAT job.

As for college and making money, I’m not family oriented per se (I don’t want kids and I’m single ATM), but I have pets (2 dogs, 2 cats, and 11 ducks) and I want to buy a horse eventually at the stables I volunteer at. The horse is a few years off because boarding is expensive, but it’s an obtainable goal lol. Just gotta get promoted, which I am working towards with the guidance of my boss and the owner/president of the company.

cashmaggot OP ,

Yooo! You're treating your dog thing by HAVING DOGS! Hahahaha, I love it! I wish I could get behind either. Dogs kinda freak me out, because I have sensory issues with drool and I hate sudden noises. And cats, I'm just unfortunately allergic. But never really dug them, because one scratched up my face as a little ninja. Ducks though, that's something different. My friend from Ohio is the only other person I know who's had them. Two to be exact. But that's really something different.

Sounds like you've got land, which is a nice thing to have. And time, which is also good stuff. I don't know too much about horses, but my partner says there's a primal connection between horses and humans. Says there's nothing like riding a horse on this planet. Gotta be wonderful. Sounds like you're in a good space. Perhaps consider finding a mentee, so that you can share going both ways. There's a lot of wonderful individuals inside of organizations who might have the fixins for greater but get stuck because they can't seem to get a leg up. If you can think of anyone in that boat, consider reaching out and forming a relationship. This is going to sound absolutely awful, but I think being a mentor looks quite good as well. Because it requires a series of characteristics which are desirable in the world of business. But it also is a solid act, because you get to repay the favor that someone might have lent to you. Either way, I hope you enjoy your horse when you get them a couple of years down the road =)!

LaunchesKayaks ,
@LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world avatar

Your partner is totally right about horses. I had a mare growing up that knew my my depression was getting bad and did her best to cheer me up. There’s a horse I love at the stables I volunteer at who is similar. She knows when I’m down or frustrated or whatever and demands attention lol. Hopefully she stays that way once she has her foal and doesn’t become a hella protective mama lol

cashmaggot OP ,

Is she who you plan on purchasing down the line? I'm not sure entirely how it works. Yeah, my gal loves horses. Loves skateboarding more. Maybe someday I'll get on one? Maybe not. Either way, it's cool. I think I might have missed my chance a hundred years ago and not even thought about it cause I knew someone who went to school for it. Instead I just hung with the horse folk, and we drank some of the most heinous alcohol known to man. Was chill though.

LaunchesKayaks ,
@LaunchesKayaks@lemmy.world avatar

I would love to buy her tbh, but idek who actually owns her lol. Most of the horses I interact with don’t get the attention they deserve from their actual owners. Seems like most owners there don’t actually come around too often. It’s a full service stables, so you pay a monthly bill to have your horse fed, watered, and their stall mucked. You just have to worry about the mandatory vet visits and hiring a carrier for their hooves.

The horse people I grew up around also had the most heinous alcohol as well lmao.

davel , to programming in LLMs as interactive rubber ducks (or Q&A trainers)
@davel@lemmy.ml avatar

Brian Eno should add a new card to the Oblique Strategies deck.

Siegfried , to lemmyshitpost in I drew the Mexico states by memory

UK and frnace now are México states

niktemadur ,

The Faroe Islands are Baja California!

CanadaPlus , (edited ) to explainlikeimfive in Impedance, floating

Why do some ICs have tri state, low, high, and high impedance? Isn’t high impedance the same thing as floating?

It means that it will resist being changed by inputs. Yes, like a pin that’s floating relative to the chip.

If it is high impedance that means it had to be connected to something, right? Some kind of big capacitor or inductor in the chip?

No, it’s probably a transistor (active component) that switches to a highly resistive state, leaving the output pin effectively floating - that is, not connected via the chip. Impedance relates to how quickly the charge in that lump responds to voltage (or how quickly matter responds to force in a mechanical system). Not responding is very high, responding quickly is low.

Capacitors and inductors effect impedance, but they aren’t the only things that can do so, and in fact impedance tends to very with which frequency you’re measuring it at, so you can’t really say it has a certain exact value without context.

High - Connected to the high reference voltage.

Low - Connected to the low reference voltage.

High impedance - Not connected.

half_built_pyramids OP ,

I thought transistors were just base, collector, and emitter.

How is it switched to be in a high impedance state?

CanadaPlus , (edited )

That’s for a BJT or similar. There’s other kinds of transistors, and CMOS digital logic is based on MOSFETs. In MOSFETs, it’s gate, source and drain. If you apply the right voltage (negative for p-type, positive for n-type) to the gate of a MOSFET, the resistance between the source and drain skyrockets. It’s like pinching off a hose. Ideally when fully closed it’s like there’s no connection at all. (And the gate shouldn’t ever conduct - it just controls the channel between source and drain)

This is pretty much the whole principle behind CMOS, by the way. It’s a bunch of hoses pinching each other on and off in such a pattern that it preforms logic. It’s easy to manufacture on a chip for reasons I won’t go into unless you really want.

half_built_pyramids OP ,

Thank you, I think I get it. I was only thinking in one type of transistor.

When the resistance goes high, why is that called high impedance, instead of something like high resistance?

And yes, please tell me about cmos manufacture stuff. Just watched a breaking taps video where he’s trying to make his own die 1nm across with lithography. Cool shit, would love to hear any insight you want to share.

CanadaPlus , (edited )

When the resistance goes high, why is that called high impedance, instead of something like high resistance?

Disclaimer that I’m not actually an electrical engineer, but I’m pretty sure it’s just convention. Positive charge is also an absence of electrons, just because Ben Franklin guessed wrong, and conventional current goes the opposite direction to the actual current. I probably would have called it “floating”, “disconnected”, “stopped” or “open”, if it was up to me.

As for the manufacturing, making a MOSFET is as easy as taking a wafer of silicon, doping a couple of spots to be opposite to the bulk next to each other, and then oxidising a spot on top of the channel in between to form an insulating SiO2 gate barrier. This is good in terms of steps needed, chemical precision needed, and number of features required per transistor which translates to more transistors per area. CMOS allows an entire chip to be printed in place with barely any more steps, by using both N and P type MOSFETs in complement (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) to ensure that there’s always a path available for current. Then, the only thing left to do is start building up the interconnecting wires over top of the semiconductor with vapour deposition or similar.

There’s a video series where Sam Zeloof makes a MOSFET from scratch in his garage. Skip to the second video if you don’t care about the theory so much. Wikipedia also has a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:CMOS_fabrication_process.svg of the process of printing CMOS in more detail.

RandomStickman , to lemmyshitpost in I drew the Mexico states by memory
@RandomStickman@kbin.run avatar

Brazil stole the suez panama canal

n3m37h , to patientgamers in What have you been playing this week?

Helldivers 2 spreading managed democracy for Super Earth

tacosanonymous , to science_memes in Boopable

Because we all agreed not to. Quit ruining our ignorant and peaceful existence.

Peruvian_Skies , to memes in US government moral alignment

The outrage is actually for the opposite reason: he wasn’t elected.

But yes, it is a ridiculous double standard regardless.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

lmao I love how any time a US puppet isn’t elected burgerlanders start claiming the the elections were unfair 🤡

PanArab ,
@PanArab@lemmy.ml avatar

You clearly fail to understand the White Man’s Burden.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

😆

Peruvian_Skies ,

I love how you just assume people are “burgerlanders” when they disagree with you. Look at my username, comemierda.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

I’ll be sure to account for the little mierdas shilling for the empire in the future

Peruvian_Skies ,

It must be amazing to live in your head. Everyone who disagrees with you has an agenda, so you never need to actually think about any of your stupid baseless opinions.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

Nah, I just think you’re a scumbag who’d gladly exploit others for your own personal benefit. And since you never actually think about any of your stupid baseless opinions, you don’t realize why that makes you a scumbag.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

also, weird how actual election observers who were on the ground seem to disagree with you orinocotribune.com/venezuela-while-us-politicians…

Peruvian_Skies ,

Funny how the people are rioting in the streets and you’re pretending that everything is okay. Stupid fuck8ng first world socialists who never experienced the absokute scourge that is a socialist dictatorship talking down to the people who actually suffer from your high horses of privilege and misinformation.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

I literally grew up in USSR, but go on tell me more about these socialist dictatorships. Meanwhile, don’t have to look further than burgerland to see people rioting on the streets being burtally put down by the regime’s security forces. The sheer imbecility on display is truly astounding.

Peruvian_Skies ,

You’re obviously lying. Every single person I have ever met who grew up in the USSR - and they number in the hundreds - absolutely hates communism and authoritarianism. It’s only rich, sheltered idiots who never worked a day in their life and live on mommy and daddy’s credit cards like you who defend communism.

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

Ah yes, me having grown up in USSR and not having dumb fuck views obviously means I must be lying. Figures that you’d be the sort of imbecile who doesn’t understand the concept of selection bias. The fact that you hang out with the same kinds of dipshits like yourself isn’t exactly a surprise. Here’s a dose of reality for you to seethe and cope over.

75% of Russians have expressed increasingly positive opinions about the Soviet Union over the years. Only a small portion of those surveyed said they had negative associations with the Soviet Union. The economic deficit, long lines and coupons were named by 4% of respondents each, while the Iron Curtain, economic stagnation and political repressions were named by 1% each, the Levada Center said.

And here’s another poll showing that most people think the Soviet economic system was more correct

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/562f1ff8-900a-470d-85d2-03fffccb0e4d.png

And of course, it’s not just in Russia either:

You’re an utter clown.

Peruvian_Skies ,

Did your butler fetch all those links for you?

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar

seethe and cope scumbag

yogthos OP ,
@yogthos@lemmy.ml avatar
moon , to asklemmy in Sorry for the potentially controversial question: is it normal for less attractive people to settle down with partners they don't find physically attractive?

If you don’t find someone physically attractive, how do you settle down with them? Do you just accept getting into bed with someone you’re physically repulsed by every night?

tiefling ,

Not every relationship is based on physical attraction and, by extension, sex

moon ,

I’m not denying that ace spectrum people have relationships and settle down as well. But OP is asking about the normative (read allosexual) experience and explicitly mentions physical attraction.

The vast majority of relationships will involve physical attraction and sex. It’s highly unusual for that to not be the case for allosexual people. That’s not a value judgement—if a minority of allo people find something else works for them, then that’s great. But if OP is asking if this is normal, then no it’s not. Even ‘less attractive’ people, as OP put it, find people they’re attracted to enough to enjoy a lifetime of intimacy and sex with.

Overcoming a lack of physical attraction is a pretty big barrier and I can’t see most people overcoming that barrier just to ‘settle down.’ Not being your physical ideal is one thing, most of us settle down with people who don’t look like models or actors, but finding someone physically unattractive is a tough sell in most cases.

WhyJiffie ,

I’m not denying that ace spectrum people have relationships and settle down as well. But OP is asking about the normative (read allosexual) experience and explicitly mentions physical attraction.

I don’t think this only applies to ace people. Sometimes you just realize you can’t have everything, settle with someone “below your standards” in respect to that, and even if you sleep in the same bed, you don’t do anything with each other in that way.

Thing is, sex is not a privilege. If you - as someone in such a situation as OP - can’t accept that, you are in danger of growing… hateful views. I don’t want to become such a person, and it’s clear that it’s not their fault that they are not attracted to me. Realizing this helped me accept it.
To be totally clear, yes, I’m not ace, I have the desire, but that’s just not how it works.

There are still other benefits of having a partner, like not being lonely and sharing the costs of living.

To also respond to OP, I don’t know if this is “the solution”. This is better for everyone involved than the alternative where you grow to be a hateful person. But maybe you should reevaluate if you are really in such a situation as you think. Possibly you are right, possibly not.

moon ,

Thing is, sex is not a privilege. If you - as someone in such a situation as OP - can’t accept that, you are in danger of growing… hateful views.

No one is entitled to sex, I agree. But in a relationship, you are allowed to make clear what your needs are and move on if those needs aren’t being met. It’s not entitlement to know what you want. Having a ‘dead bedroom’ is why a lot of relationships end.

I don’t want to become such a person, and it’s clear that it’s not their fault that they are not attracted to me. Realizing this helped me accept it.

If I may ask, was there any physical attraction between you two when you met?

WhyJiffie ,

If I may ask, was there any physical attraction between you two when you met?

To be honest, there is no other person here. Not yet, at least. My case is a little different, because it’s not about how I look, not even the personality (but who knows actually? I know I have problems e.g. finding the right tone, and sometimes seeming harsh), but some other properties that are day to day pretty noticeable, and are often associated with being handicapped (not in the meeting of being silly) (even by myself when I notice it on others). I know that this is universally a thing (or rather things) that is hard to accept, and I seriously wouldn’t want to live with someone like that either.

The point I wanted to make is that it’s ok if no one wants to be with me.
I have not yet started searching for an “economical partnership”.

moon ,

I don’t know you but my advice is that you talk to a therapist before you condemn yourself to a life of unhappiness. What you’re thinking about yourself is not always objective, even if you think it is. Being self-critical is not the same as being realistic

RBWells ,

There is a lot of room between attraction and repulsion though. A not ideal looking person who is so good in bed, loves you and you get along with? Maybe they are neutral to you looks-wise but hot for reasons other than looks.

Someone whose looks repel you? No, that’s never going to work.

bhamlin , to linux in Switching back to Windows. For now.

Which distro were you using?

Trikami OP ,

Debian, Arch and Endeavour. Endeavour being the current one, Debian having the least problems until kernel issues without logs. That was more than likely caused by misconfiguration. Arch was too much and Endeavour is pretty much the same. All of them have the same weird small issues when it comes to gaming. Other than that, they all work fine, other than Wayland issues.

Most might suggest to just use X11, but VRR is a must and no matter how I’ve tried to make X11 work, it’s just so much worse than Wayland.

ardi60 ,
@ardi60@reddthat.com avatar

I use Kubuntu LTS for 10 years with xorg and I have minimal issues so far and it is enjoyable than Windows

bhamlin ,

I feel all of that. Debian is painfully slow to bring up-to-date, and all of Arch is neurotic.

You might have a better time with Fedora as they are closest to Wayland, but Fedora is pathologically open source to the point that if there aren’t open source drivers for a thing you’re triple tucked…

Gaming on linux has been, still is, and always will be a struggle. I hope you give it a try again in a year or so. I personally use Debian as my base system, with an Arch VM on CPU and GPU passthrough for work and gaming. You’ll get there eventually! ☺️

IsoSpandy ,

I had a lot of the same issues you are stating until I switched over to fedora. I have an nvidia Optimus laptop and it was quite the pain until I installed fedora and used the proprietary drivers from rpm fusion. I use b9ttles and steam to run my games and I can play most of the games I want to. Even Wayland works nice. I am using the Plasma spin of Fedora 40. Hope you can find the solutions to your problems.

Protip, use Rufus to create the windows install stuck and disable all the telemetry if you want to.

Happy computing.

rozodru ,
@rozodru@lemmy.ca avatar

question for you and anyone else for that matter: I’m using CachyOS right now and it’s fine, I like it but the more I read about Fedora the more I’m tempted to switch. Would you go with just straight up Fedora 40 or give Nobara a shot?

IsoSpandy ,

I have read online that Nobara/Bazzite etc have many perks, but I haven’t really tried them. The main issue of my system is that I have only 512gb of ssd storage and hence heavier distros are a no no for me.

Plus I used vanilla fedora from the get go and am not afraid to use the terminal or program something to solve any minor problems I am having.

I would recommend using vanilla fedora to first get the feel of the rpm ecosystem and if you like it,then test out the other variants.

worldeater , to linux in Switching back to Windows. For now.

My personal experience has been that Linux is great for general use, and quite a few verified games. But anything multiplayer with anticheat, games that are regularly updated, etc, it’s a constant struggle. So I have a separate hard drive for windows on my gaming desktop and, in general, mostly use Windows on that machine (with a lot of tweaks like openshell). But all my other devices I run off Linux and it works out fine.

Kualk ,

Dedicated gaming machine or dual boot is a way to go.

I played steam on Arch and one update of OS and game stops working.

Despite claims, Windows gets better outcomes. I played a lot of World of Tanks Blitz and the same hardware on Linux was significantly lower graphics quality and FPS compared to Windows.

rozodru ,
@rozodru@lemmy.ca avatar

really? anticheat causes you problems? weird. been playing Elden Ring all day with no issues.

I also play a couple MMOs which update constantly and haven’t had any issues with either.

Bookmeat ,

It’s funny because I’ve seen a lot of complaints about freezes and lag spikes in Elden Ring, but I’ve never noticed these because they’re apparently not an issue in Linux.

worldeater ,

I’m sure there are games that run flawlessly, which is why I added the qualifier “In my personal experience”. Despite trying different versions of Proton and launch options, I’ve had trouble getting a consistent quality of gameplay experience with Guild Wars 2, where after long periods of play the frames drop or the game freezes altogether. Same with competitive games like Overwatch 2. It will run fine for long periods of time, but once in a blue moon it will crash altogether. Obviously not ideal for doing fractals with a guild or grinding ranked where getting disconnected lets my teammates or friends down and negatively affects my ranking process or even catching a temporary cooldown to be able to queue up again

Blxter ,
@Blxter@lemmy.zip avatar

I think it will be a long time of ever I will remove my windows boot. I love gaming on Linux but until games “support” Linux it won’t be my only boot device.

FBJimmy , to linux in Switching back to Windows. For now.

I’ve been 100% linux for my daily home computing for over a year now… With one exception… To be honest I didn’t even try particularly hard to make gaming work under Linux.

Instead I have a Windows VM - setup with full passthrough access to my GPU and it’s own NVME - just for Windows gaming. To my mind now it’s in the same category as running console emulation.

As soon as I click shutdown in windows, it pops me straight back into my Linux desktop.

Extrasvhx9he , (edited )

I do something similar but instead of a VM I just have windows installed on a separate hard drive and just boot up from there when I need it (I don’t play games though)

braindefragger , (edited )

Fnfnd

taaz ,

Do you have a dual gpu setup for this or is there a virtualization feature I don’t know about yet

infeeeee ,

Search for “vfio single gpu”, It’s possible, but it has drawbacks. Iirc you have to run everything as root or something like that.

Another recommended way is to run a headless linux as host, and passthrough the gpu to a linux guest next to a windows guest, than you just switch between the guests

FBJimmy ,

Single GPU with scripts that run before and after the VM is active to unload the GPU driver modules from the kernel.

I think this was my starting point and I had to do just a few small tweaks to get it right for my setup - i.e. unload and reload the precise set of kernel modules that block GPU passthrough on my machine.

gitlab.com/Karuri/vfio

At this point from a user experience p.o.v it’s not much different to dual booting, just with a different boot sequence. The main advantage though is that I can have the Windows OS on a small virtual harddrive for ease of backup/clone/restore and have game installs on a dedicated NVME that doesn’t need backing up

danielquinn ,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

What’re you using for visualisation? I didn’t realise you could get decent graphics performance with VirtualBox.

Bitrot ,
@Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

They didn’t say virtualbox, KVM is built into Linux.

Direct passthrough of the GPU means it is no longer available to the host OS but works as if directly connected to the VM.

danielquinn ,
@danielquinn@lemmy.ca avatar

Interesting. I had no idea such capabilities were available out of the box. Thanks!

braindefragger ,

People have been passing though GPUs to their windows vm for almost a decade.

avidamoeba ,
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

Fucking Hackerman. Is there a way to display the VM’s output in a window/fullscreen on Linux today? The last time I tried this, I had to have a separate cable from the passed-thru (secondary) GPU to another input in my monitor.

xycu ,

Looking-glass.io is what most use for that

avidamoeba ,
@avidamoeba@lemmy.ca avatar

Ooh, that project was not usable back when I tried VFIO. Nice.

nohoken ,

Long past time for Linux to be set aside. Shit on windows too. We desperately need a return to early DOS and CP/M days. With the TRS-80 OS ecosystem, OSes were simple and command line, and any hacking was extremely easy and fast to detect. The power of the command line let you wipe out any hackers super super fast. Enough of this Windows GUI and hiding things from users shit. GUI is only for losers. Return the power to the devs.

AndrewZabar ,

Wow! Lol I hope this was satire because as satire it’s actually kinda funny. If serious… whoa! Check that foil hat.

zurohki , (edited )

I meant to do this when I built my old system back in 2018, but I found the handful of games I regularly play worked okay on Linux so I never got around to it, and Linux game compatibility has improved leaps and bounds from there.

If it’s a Steam game, for most of them these days you only have to tick a box in Steam’s settings to tell it to use Proton for all games and the game will just work when you click play.

You might give it a try. Or don’t, I’m not your mother.

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