I might try this then. How do you run openvino, is it included in the docker container, or is it external?
I might try this then. How do you run openvino, is it included in the docker container, or is it external?
My frigate box is a PC which only has one ethernet port, so I should buy a separate network card in order to do that, right? I was thinking of buying a 2.5gb card anyways.
I could do that, but I don’t know if the iGPU of my i7 8700 is good enough. Even then, if it means taking load off my CPU I think it would be worth it.
ventoy is what has worked best for me
Well, I do. In fact I’ve installed Linux on 4 classmate’s laptops, after insisting for some time.
VSCode or JetBrains Rider are good options for .net development, both available on Linux.
all you had to do, was enabling rpm fusion cj
I wish more apps where officially supported, instead of saying it supports Linux and providing a .deb. Good thing the community provides unofficial flatpaks at least.
I understand your perspective but the steps you mentioned are what you’d expect when installing an os. Even windows 11 would require you to turn on TPM which, for some, might be a super painful experience.
I use flatpak for all GUI apps I use.
I have a zenbook as well (not the same model) and I only had problems with Windows. When coming back from suspension it would be hot and the screen had like white fog on the edges. I tried to fix it but with no success. Frustrated with that I decided to give Linux a try and never had that problem again.
I assume you changed the ssd, I didn’t know that was possible, I thought it was soldered to the motherboard. Is it possible you received a faulty drive from WD?
check fd-find, “A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to ‘find’”. Really good trust me
why not just evaluate the apps themselves
“Objectively”: Proceeds to give his opinion
GIMP is shipped by default with Linux distros
This isn’t true for most distros. Might be for some specific distro, but most distros I’ve used don’t come with GIMP pre installed.
Nvidia and Wayland work when used in compatible desktop environments. GNOME and KDE Plasma are supported. Something like sway, for exapmle, doesn’t support Nvidia.
Before switching to Linux I used to think: “Linux users really use the terminal to install apps?? So archaic”. Now I can’t be more grateful of being able to install everything from the terminal.
Using nvidia with Arch is super simple. Just select the nvidia proprietary drivers during installation (archinstall), and it’s done. It is great for gaming, steam is available in the multilib repository (enable it during the installation with archinstall). It is pretty much ready to go after the installation. You might have heard that it is super hard to install, but that is if you install it manually (without archinstall). Haven’t tried suse myself, so I can’t talk about it, but I can definitely recommend Arch, not only for gaming but for daily driving as well. Having the AUR spared me the headaches I had back when I used mint and fedora, and programs weren’t available in the distro repository.
That’s great to hear. I will have the exact same usage you say (jellyfin transcodes, camera decoding and openvino). Thanks for the info!