@tkw8 I thought brew was a MacIntosh thing?
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@Astella You don’t have to, or at least I don’t have to.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•Advice for picking a PSU for server class GPUs? Also a question about adapter cable12·2 days ago@Smokeydope Please understand that a PSU is rated at the total power it can supply to 5v and 12v lines combined, but it can not supply that full power to both. And in my experience many brands of PSUs do not live up to their ratings. If you’re going to run a “beefy” GPU and CPU, I suggest going with 1000 watt or 1200 watt supply. If you are worried about an efficiency then go with a Platinum, they provide good efficiency even at low load levels. This will give you the overhead you need for your machine to run without strain.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•Liberux Nexx GNU/Linux smartphone starts crowdfunding!63·2 days ago@AprilShowers The hardware surely is very nice, unfortunately I can’t justify spending 3x what my laptop costs for a phone.
@robber Even though I said yes in the bios, cpuid still shows max id of 64 which
is reasonable for an 18 core 36 thread CPU. So it seems the Linux kernel figures it out on it’s own.
@original_reader Here I’ve got a mix of Ubuntu, Debian, Zorin, PopOS, Fedora, Alma, Rocky8, MxLinux, Mint,and Kali, but the primary work horse is Ubuntu.
@LandedGentry You can partition a thumb drive and install just as if it was a hard drive. I create thumb drives this way mainly for restoration of a system is something gets broken to where it can’t boot, kernel corrupted, initramfs, etc.
@original_reader Install on USB thumb drive and give a test drive, when you like, install on main media.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•Adopting sudo-rs By Default in Ubuntu 25.10 | and status update on rust coreutils and rust PGP13·9 days ago@DieserTypMatthias Sorry if freedom is not important to you but perhaps that’s why you’re on lamey.
@communism Only difference between a “server” distro and a “desktop” distro are what packages are included, and given that most all distros put all the packages on their repositories you can start with any and tailor to your needs.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there any distros that could run on a pentium 2?11·10 days ago@nichtburningturtle The Pentium II is 32-bit and possesses an MMU, so provided you have adequate memory, pretty much any 32-bit distro such as puppy linux or antix should work fine. Newer Ubuntu which is now 64-bit only will not.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•Microsoft’s latest security update has ruined dual-boot Windows and Linux PCs12·10 days ago@obbeel Stunned at Microsoft’s audacity? Where the fuck have you been the last 40 years?
@gpstarman I only use Asus and Gigabyte boards, both have the ability to flash the BIOS using the maintenance engine on the board without even having a CPU or memory installed, let alone an OS booted.
@CaptDust It’s great when those odd occurrences of things “just working” actually happen.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•Found a printer and Linux saves the day again41·10 days ago@GnuLinuxDude I mostly use HP printers because with Linux they are always plug-in-play and because although they will provide a message telling me my ink is cheap third party ink, they will none the less accept and print with it.
The model I previously used, HP OfficeJet 5258 All-in-One Printer, the printer always worked well but the scanners kept breaking. I went through four of these before I tried an Epson. The Epson initially worked with 3rd party ink then after a software update didn’t so at that point I trashed it and bought another HP, this time a HP OfficeJet 8015e Wireless Color All-in-One Printer which is much more robustly constructed. In fact while taking it out of the box, I accidentally dropped it from chest level and all it did was bounce, no pieces broke off, nothing. So far it has been reliable both for scanning and printing although the scanner is easier to jam but at least it doesn’t break in the process of my unjamming it.
@TCB13 Problem is by being one big bloatware, rather than a set of small discrete tools, if one part of it misbehaves, your entire system is toast instead of just removing, replacing, or fixing that one part. That’s why that philosophy belongs in Windows NOT Linux.
@TCB13 @petsoi It seems to me that systemd is going the exact opposite of the original Unix philosophy of make a tool for a specific task, make it do it’s task well, and then use the necessary tools for the job, systemd is becoming one big piece of bloatware that gets in the way of use rather than helps it.
@jorge Been using this for a long time.
nanook@friendica.eskimo.comto Linux@lemmy.ml•PipeWire 1.0 RC released (Final release expected end 2023)11·13 days ago@imgel What I’d love to see for pipewire is a working port of pulse-effects. I really miss the capabilities that provided and it will not work with pulse-pipewire, I’ve tried.
@Sparrowette As long as it continues to offer so much hatred for people offering to help, I don’t see how it can survive let alone thrive.