Very dumb complaint, but it’s something I can’t ignore after seeing it: Why are all icons for the sound previews symbolic, but the ones for the notification and USB colored?
I make software, and videos about Tech Rabbit Holes
Very dumb complaint, but it’s something I can’t ignore after seeing it: Why are all icons for the sound previews symbolic, but the ones for the notification and USB colored?
Well, on Linux, lack of codec support makes it such a pain to work with it. Basically useless (unless you buy the Premium version).
On Windows, I always had weird rendering errors and crashes.
Other than that, it’s really good. Love the fusion system.
Has never worked properly (on Linux, even on Windows)
I don’t know if it can help, but…
I’m running Fedora 38, Stock GNOME and an RX 6600. I had no issues whatsoever with my dual monitor setup.
The main one is 1440p, 165Hz. It worked out of the box, even though, I did have to select the refresh rate manually in settings (like in any other OS).
The secondary monitor is 1080p, 60Hz. Also works fine.
Even though, I did notice that on X11, the cursor seems to move at 165Hz, but the windows and content itself do not. I usually always use Wayland, that works perfectly for me.
Sorry to say it, but Windows never was your operating system. It was always Microsoft’s. You’re just allowed to use it. You just bought a permit.
Well, I’ve used multiple Epson and even a HP WiFi printer. And all of them worked perfectly. Way better than on Windows. In the worst cases, I had to choose the driver from a list and that’s it. In some instances, I even have ink level indicators, and options to clean the printer. It’s really cool
Shouldn’t it be open source? I thought Wine was licensed under the GPL
Hmm, that’s weird. I was able to run Stable Diffusion locally with Linux + RX6600.
Probably because I used Easy Diffusion. At first, I couldn’t get the GPU acceleration to work, and I was constantly running out of RAM (Not using VRAM), so my system always froze and crashed.
Turns out it was a ROCM bug, that I don’t know if it’s fixed by now, but I remember “fixing it” by setting an environment variable to a previous version.
Then, it all worked really good. Took between 30 seconds to 2 minutes to make an image.