My first thought with this meme was chronic distrohopping. Do I tell them what I'm using this week? Or the last distro I used for any amount of time? Do I tell them the obscure distro name or the name of the major distro it's forked off of? If I'm dual booting do I tell them the experimental OS I'm daily driving or the reliable fallback I have on my other partition?
Honestly after seeing how much the 1080p screen hurts performance on the ROG Ally, I've decided I'm very happy with the 800p screen on the deck. I might be able to get some benefit rendering at 800p and upscaling with FSR, but 720p looks pretty great at this size imo.
That's amazing looking. I really want one, but don't think I'm willing to make the swap myself.
Might put just the back plate on. I was eyeing the Jsaux ones but didn't like the hotplate.
I played through it before, and it ran great. I'd suggest trying the normal fixes:
Verify game files
Try a different proton version. I usually try both the highest version of proton 7 and proton experimental.
Reboot.
If none of those work, put PROTON_LOG=1 %command%
in the launch options for the game inside the steam game properties. This will generate a log file in your home folder that you can share to help identify what went wrong.
If you're wanting logs for a game that's originally for windows and is running through proton, you can add PROTON_LOG=1 %command%
to your launch options in steam game properties. It will generate a log file in your home folder.
This is the what I did. My wife still uses windows so I configured the mouse on her computer, saved the configuration, and have it working smoothly on my PC.
While it was easy to set it up this way, I really don't like the idea of needing windows to configure my mouse though. I really wish logitech would start offering official Linux support.
3.5 includes a ton of new stuff, and I'm assuming it's not all kernel based. Things like the saturation slider for example.
It's certainly possible their write distribution isn't as good as SSD's. Honestly it feels like there should be a bigger tradeoff I'm not seeing in my reading here, so I'm kinda hoping someone knowledgeable on the subject will jump in and confirm or deny.
But ultimately I don't think that using a microSD for running windows is necessarily a terrible idea, sounds like it could work out ok.
Nicer microSD cards now claim to have comparable or better numbers of write cycles compared with average SSDs. Samsung claims their nicer cards have 100,000 writes per sector for example, while many SSDs seem to report having 40,000-100,000.
Unless I'm misunderstanding something it seems like running windows on a microSD should be fine. You can always go with a cheaper card too if you want low risk.
@Fubarberry
@lemmy.fmhy.ml