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linux

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linuxFan , in Good dumb TV for my living room media center?
@linuxFan@vlemmy.net avatar

I’ve been looking for a TV for awhile now, and I’ve found that there aren’t really any practical dumb ones. There are a few models, but they’re more expensive and have lower specs, cheaper panels, fewer menu options, etc.

Overall, the smart TVs are going to be cheaper/better because the company plans to make money on target ads, data mining, etc. Just don’t connect it or enter a wi-fi password. Sadly that’s where we’re at now.

dandroid , in What modern (gaming) laptops should be avoided for proprietary firmware or whitelists/gate keeping? Also posted Linux GPU telemetry data from Stable Diffusion

I recently got an Alienware, and I wouldn’t recommend it to my worst enemy. I got a great deal on it through someone who works at Dell. But it is so controlling. I changed the fans because the ones that came with it were too loud, and now it always complains at boot that the fans are not working properly, and I need to click “ok” for it to boot.

It also has proprietary hardware in it. The liquid cooler and PSU are so custom that they wouldn’t fit in any other chassis, and I doubt I could get another PSU to fit in this chassis. Oh, and the motherboard is an L shape, so the I/Os wouldn’t line up with the window if I wanted to swap it out. All the software that came with it was so garbage that I originally re-installed windows. But there was still issues like it constantly rebooting. So I eventually just installed Linux and haven’t looked back.

Mothra ,
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

Hi there, fellow Alienware owner. May I ask which model you own and which linux distro you ended up installing? I’m terrified of making the jump for several reasons but graphics driver issues are high on the list. (I’m with an m15r7)

dandroid ,

I have the Aurora R15. I installed Ubuntu. Being that mine is a desktop, it doesn’t have the graphics driver issues that you are probably thinking of.

I used to have a work laptop (a Dell as well, IIRC, but it was years ago) with an Nvidia graphics card that I installed Ubuntu on, and it had tons of graphics driver issues. I think it had something to do with using integrated and discrete graphics together that caused the problem. I had really bad screen tearing, and IIRC, I eventually installed the open source driver to fix that. I might still have the page bookmarked somewhere with what I did to fix the screen tearing. However, that tanked my performance. It was a work laptop, so it wasn’t a huge deal for me. I just didn’t want screen tearing because it irritated me. Oh, and after that, if it ever went to sleep, it would crash on wake like 70% of the time. So I set it to never sleep, even if the button was pressed or the lid was closed.

Yeah, it was nothing but problems. Best I can say is boot from a live USB or possibly even use another SSD you have lying around, but don’t wipe your existing one until you are very sure you don’t want to ever go back.

Mothra ,
@Mothra@mander.xyz avatar

I see… I presumed you would have a laptop since OP was talking about laptops. Just like you, I’ve installed Linux on another dell laptop some years ago and had a very similar experience with hybrid/Optimus. I’ve heard that drivers for Nvidia and laptops have improved a lot since but I am still not sure it’d work as it should.

Thanks for suggesting the live USB option, I didn’t think of it. I’ll investigate!

cspiegel , in Why is copy and paste so difficult for Linux to solve?

Others have covered PRIMARY vs CLIPBOARD (the separation of which I find to be extremely useful).

For Vim, you have access to these both via the registers + (CLIPBOARD) and * (PRIMARY). So, for example, to paste from your CLIPBOARD selection, you’d do this:

<pre style="background-color:#ffffff;">
<span style="color:#323232;">"+p
</span>

(or P). Similar for yanking:

<pre style="background-color:#ffffff;">
<span style="color:#323232;">"+yy
</span>

for example.

SpaceNoodle , in Good dumb TV for my living room media center?

Dead caps are easy to spot and easy to fix. You can gimme your old TV :)

Look on Craigslist or similar if you really want something truly dumb and affordable.

stories , in Good dumb TV for my living room media center?

You’d probably be best checking out review on rtings.

l3mming , in What modern (gaming) laptops should be avoided for proprietary firmware or whitelists/gate keeping? Also posted Linux GPU telemetry data from Stable Diffusion

Buying a laptop that can run SD will cost you more than twice as much as an equivalent desktop. A desktop will also remain upgradeable for the next 10 years or so.

j4k3 OP ,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

I’m partially disabled and stuck in a bed ~80% of my days. The ergonomics of a laptop on my custom bedside stand that can swing out of my way and 180° to use at my desk is ideal. I have a spare monitor on an arm I use when I really need it, but I hate having any regular keyboard or even being stuck with just a mouse. The touch pad, keyboard location, and screen make an ideal ergonomic situation. Like I have several mains outlets built into my stand, and the wiring is managed so that I don’t get boxed in or tangled. I hate wireless stuff going dead. When adding the cost of the screen to a PC and all the peripherals, and then accessibility mounts, it costs more for me. My only option for a tower is two computers and remotely logging in from a laptop. It is an option but not one I like.

apatters ,

While it’s not an immediate solution, Framework laptops are way ahead of the curve in terms of open sourcing their firmware, and being open and Linux-friendly in general. The Framework 16 should be out by the end of the year and will support an external gpu.

l3mming ,

All good points. Fair enough. That said, don’t be too quick to dismiss the remote desktop option. Not sure when you last tried, but these days with software like remmina, connecting remotely to a desktop (particularly one on your lan) is indistinguishable to sitting in front of it. Sure, you can’t do things like play games at any useable framerate, but for something like Stable Diffusion I would expect it to be ideal.

j4k3 OP ,
@j4k3@lemmy.world avatar

I was also kinda looking forward to connecting with an old friend over battlefield or counter strike as a bonus. That is the one constraint I will end up giving up first if I am forced to, but it gets damn lonely living like this. It will be 10 years of laying around all the time this coming February, I don’t worry about the stuff I can’t change, but I am way past due for having some real fun with friends. People are pooling together to help me out but it is like a one time and place kinda thing where I need to come up with the “thing” I need and be done with it. I’m grateful and all, I just need to make the best of it and not be too much of a burden. I have a max of $3k to play with but need to figure this out in the next few days. The lower I can keep the ask the better off I will be. The Alienware was $1450 and for a 12GBV card, that sounded great.

l3mming ,

Ah right, I see. Sounds like you’re making the right choices in the context of your unfortunate situation. Yeah, playing games pretty much rules out a remote desktop setup. Sorry I don’t have any more answers to your questions, but you’re clearly asking the right ones.

Gatsby , (edited )

A solid desktop for stabile diffusion combined with a Chromebook good enough for a remote desktop client is significantly cheaper than a laptop capable of stable diffusion. Not counting future upgradability

guyman ,

That’s not true. Do not listen to this person. They have no idea what they’re talking about.

socphoenix , in Migrating Linux install from old SSD to new SSD with different filesystem

The amount of changes you’d need to make to get Linux to boot on a different partition format and drive would be a lot of work. It would be much faster to install a new copy of Linux to the nvme drive and copy the files from the ssd post install before decommissioning the old drive.

dandroid OP ,

Thanks for the reply. I’m really dreading migrating files manually, because I use this as my server, so all my stuff would be down for an extended period of time while I migrated. :(

socphoenix ,

Is this mostly for fileserving or apps? If you’re using it as a Fileserver share the relevant parts of the ssd while you rsync all of it over to help ease downtime.

You can also install the nvme through a virtual machine and pass /dev/nvme_whatever to the vm. Then rsync everything over using ssh then reboot the whole machine using the nvme drive for the os (make sure to use UEFI for the vm on kvm).

For apps kinda the same vm deal leave the ssd up and configure the nvme install as needed then copy whatever data you need over before rebooting.

It’s more convoluted to do it that way but it will reduce downtime

dandroid OP ,

It’s for apps. I have a Lemmy server and then a few discord bots that play music for a music community that my wife is an admin for.

I honestly might just need to schedule downtime on a day that they don’t have an event on. That’s the main thing that I want up all the time.

socphoenix ,

That is probably the best option since I don’t think lemmy has the ability to work as a cluster unfortunately

Max_P ,
@Max_P@lemmy.max-p.me avatar

It’s really not that bad, unlike Windows you can pretty much just rsync the data over, update fstab and it’s good to go.

exi ,

I disagree, you usually just need to get /boot and your EFI things right on the new disk, rsync stuff over and fix any references to old disks in /etc/fstab and maybe your grub config and you are done. I have done this migration>10 times over the years onto different filesystems, partition Layout and raid configurations and it’s never been particularly hard.

socphoenix ,

That’s true if everything is supported on the current kernel. I might just be very out of touch/date here but is btrfs built in to the kernel? I was thinking he’d need to have a different kernel/loaded modules on it

exi ,

Btrfs is in the mainline kernel since 2.6.29, that’s 14 years ago my friend 😃

It’s included in every major distro for a long long time.

socphoenix ,

Well dang it’s been a while since I tried it then! I keep hearing how it’s unstable in comments so I tend to assume its fairly new even when I should know better lol

rostriano ,

What’s the magic that’s needed to make EFI happy?

exi , (edited )

Most of the time, it’s enough to copy the whole EFI partition to the new machine and update whatever boot entries are in there to point to the right new partitions.

In case of a switch to something like zfs, it’s a bit more involved and you need to boot a live Linux, chroot into the new “/” with /boot mounted and /dev, /proc, /sys bind mounted into the chroot.

Then you can run the distro-appropriate command to reinstall/ update grub into the EFI partition and they will usually take care of adding the right drivers.

Vorthas , in Share your favorite Linux Desktop Environment
@Vorthas@lemmy.ml avatar

Xfce overall, but I like MATE a lot as well. Just give me a traditional desktop experience, I don’t need mobile-like options on a desktop.

I actually switched to MATE primarily because I like its suite of software a bit more (calculator, file manager, file archiver) than Xfce’s, though I use some of MATE’s stuff (Caja mainly) on Xfce on my laptop.

Catsrules , in Good dumb TV for my living room media center?

If you really want a true dumb TV, you should look into the commercial TVs

Personally I just get any TV and don’t connect it to the internet. I disable any popup interfaces/home menus as much as I can on the TV so I just turn it on and it goes to HDMI1 and that is all the TV’s interface needs to do.
I also disable alot of the picture altering features as well. My LG TV has some true motion crap that just made everything a little bit off.

For the most part the handful of TVs I have tried just work.

SpaceNoodle ,

This is what I do. My Samsung TV can be set to turn on to a specific input, and the “smart” features never get in the way; similarly, it remains permanently disconnected from my home network.

wmassingham ,

I’ve heard of them searching for open wifi networks and using them. If I had one and cared, I’d bet the wifi card was removable like in a laptop, and I’d open it up and remove it.

But I own a dumb old CCFL TV that I got for free, and I’m going to use it until I can’t any more.

SpaceNoodle ,

I recall that the first-gen TVs with integrated Amazon Fire TV had the baseband chip directly on the mainboard like other SMPs. I also do not recall any service that would connect to open networks.

However, that’s a single datapoint from sketchy memory of something I worked on over six years ago.

Catsrules ,

I have heard of this as well. But I don’t believe I have seen any reliable source actually confirming it. I vaguely remember some posted about it on Reddit years ago saying their Samsung tv would do it. That said it is clearly a possibility that the TV could do it if programed so it is good to keep that possibility in mind. Might be worth running a few tests if your worried about it.

The good news is Open WiFi hotspots are very rare, so unless you live next to a cafe or something that provides free WiFI you don’t really have much to worry about.

I have never seen a removable WiFi card on a TV board. They are always integrated directly on the main board itself along with the CPU RAM and other components. Just look up TV Main board on ebay and see if you can find any WiFi cards on the photos.

visiblink ,
@visiblink@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I did exactly this with my Sony BRAVIA Eavesdropper Pro ™.

I despise both the privacy violations and the “soap opera effect.”

julianh , (edited ) in Wine Begins Preparations For Reorganizing & Cleaning Up Its Direct3D Code

elif, is d3d different from directx? If not isn’t this what DXVK does?

nyan ,

Direct3D is a subset of DirectX, which also includes a bunch of other Windows APIs named Direct[foo] for things like sound. DXVK is a port of WINE’s Direct3D interface to Vulkan (it would previously have used OpenGL, I presume). Since DXVK is a first cut at moving to a new lib, I would bet the internals are an incompletely-documented mess, which presumably is exactly what they mean to clean up.

minorsecond , in which linux podcasts do you listen to?

All the ones mentioned mostly. But also Linux in the Ham Shack.

someacnt , in Share your favorite Linux Desktop Environment

I cannot but mention xmonad wm with my own configurations

oldschoolnerd , in Share your favorite Linux Desktop Environment
@oldschoolnerd@lemmy.world avatar

I like Gnome a little more than KDE.

warmaster , in GNOME 45 Alpha Released With Various Optimizations, Better Built-In Screen Recorder

Is the VRR update supposed to be included in gnome 45?

Illecors , in New StackRot Linux kernel flaw allows privilege escalation

People who can find such bugs have always amazed me. The understanding of the kernel required seems so impossibly vast.

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