*except games that don’t run on proton/wine. I don’t have a Windows installation and I never have to worry about a game not running out of the box on Linux anymore.
*except games that don’t run on proton/wine. I don’t have a Windows installation and I never have to worry about a game not running out of the box on Linux anymore.
Yes. The intelligent multi-device-type feature is a huge improvement for any workload that needs more space than what an SSD can affordably provide, even moreso with the reliability of eg RAID1.
Before that I had to use BTRFS (RAID1) on bcache (not fs) devices, but half of the cache space was being wasted on the redundant copies because the two systems operate independently.
Quick update to let you know that it works on all my tasks with ROCm 5.7
I haven’t had an issue with gaming on Linux in ages. Since the Steam Deck came out checking the compatibility of a game is an afterthought I do not need to worry about.
I use PyTorch daily at work and I’m happy to have gone AMD. Initial support for last gen was lacking but it’s there now. It mostly works , the performance is great but it crashes on some unusual tasks.
Install the ROCm version of packages and it mostly works (at least on Arch, and I assume Ubuntu since it has official packages from AMD.)
PyTorch actually works pretty well on Arch with opencl-amd and opencl-amd-dev (the official packages didn’t work for me). I’m extremely happy with my new Radeon.
I am very happy with my ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 GA402RJ. It’s small, powerful, not too expensive, has a recent AMD GPU (RX6800S) / CPU (Ryzen 9 6900), upgradeable RAM, good resolution, and a gorgeous screen (great for photo development too).
I was very confused as to why you would need regular updates of, say, a SofleRGB, then I opened your links.
I use Zim, a local wiki which uses text files with a markdown-like syntax, Syncthing to synchronize the notes, and Markor on Android supports this syntax.
I tried that app but it crashes all the time on my phone from the moment it asked me to upload a photo.
How does it compare to Zim?
Correct. I game a lot and I never have to worry about Linux compatibility anymore.