- cross-posted to:
- linux_gaming@lemmy.ml
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux_gaming@lemmy.ml
- linux@lemmy.ml
We’re 0.02% ahead btw
I’m jumping on the mint ship during the holidays. See you never windows!
Every penguin is an ally!
Enjoy I use mint 21.1 Victoria 21.1 xfce on my gaming laptop myself
Little tip make a second drive with a backup so that if it ever gets a bit to complicated you’ll have something to come back to also you could duel boot as well if you need windows for work or smth although tbh I hardly have any issues with mint it normally works outside the box . Mints an all-round decent distro in my expirence
I also recommend you install neofetch onto your system when you do install Linux you can customise neofetch to look however you want you can also rice neofetch as well
sudo apt install neofetch
Thanks for the tips! I’ve actually been using mint on my work pc for two years now and I love it, no problems whatsoever.
Now it’s time to jump ship on my gaming pc as well. So excited about it!
One of us
I’m doing my part!
My positive experience with my Steam Deck got me to take the plunge and now I’m happily gaming on Mint.
Removed by mod
Steam decks have been out for years now, and even though they sold millions of copies they’re not the majority of Linux machines, you can check the GPU
AMD Custom GPU 0405
on the GPU field since that’s the steam deck one, it’s at 0.82% and had a 0.23% increase this month. So some of the increase in Linux came from it (around half), but there’s still a lot of new Linux PC users.Also it’s worth mentioning that every time that the Linux share has gone down it coincides with a spike in Chinese language usage.
I was digging around on the steam hardware survey and it does list steam deck separately if you tell the hardware survey to only show you Linux, and it is ~5.5x more popular that arch, and also reports that arch and Ubuntu are similar, leading me to believe the steam deck is fully excluded from the default combined view.
If you take that x5.5 and use it to extrapolate, steam decks should have about 0.82% market share
@Nibodhika @I_Has_A_Hat umm, what does the chinese language have to do with any of this, I wonder?
2024 is gonna be the year of the Linux desktop, I can feel it!
psst
Every year is the year of the Linux desktop. Linux rocks.
Wayland on its way to wreck everything because of compatibility and funni Nvidia drivers
I’ve been running Wayland for a while on my amd rig and haven’t had any problems with xwayland in regards to compatibility. Nvidia on the other hand is problematic but the drivers seem to be improving with every release.
I’m doing my part. Had a 2nd desktop worth of parts and put latest Ubuntu on it, trying out games that I have already installed on Windows. Once my game pass sub expires next year I’ll probably fully switch over.
Looking to reinstall Linux on my dual-boot. For legacy robotics reasons, I still have ubuntu 18.04 on it.
Which distro would be the best for gaming + CUDA software dev?
I’m using Fedora and it’s been great, a bit iffy with nVIDIA out of the box though.
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed has the most up to date nVIDIA stack. Mainly because the packages are controlled by nVIDIA directly.
I’ll check out Tumbleweed. Any downsides to it compared to Ubuntu forks?
It has been a while, but nVidia drivers have always been a pain to install, especially when you also need an older version of CUDA. If tumbleweed has a better compatibility/easier installation process, it is a big win.
Tumbleweed is rolling release (kinda like arch), although they have a pretty rigorous testing process. So that could be a pro or a con depending on who you’re asking.
If what you’re specifically after is older CUDA toolkit compatibility, then I’d recommend using distrobox instead. That’s what I do for ML workloads. (If you plan on redistributing binaries then you’ll have to
strip
them with binutils though)
I recommend Ubuntu 22 don’t recommend pop despite all the articles you will find saying it is great for gaming
Check out Garuda
Honestly: Any Ubuntu Fork (such as Mint, Kubuntu, etc) is fine, Arch as well(but harder). Vanilla Ubuntu is ok.
This is not the definitive answer, and you should reevaluate after a time, what you like and don’t like, but for a starter, give those a spin.
That take depends on what you need from Ubuntu 18.04. I’m not to familiar with how robotics stuff works, but perhaps a docker image would work? That way you can keep whatever libraries you need, and run it on whatever base OS you need. That said, I don’t know how much of CUDA or whatever is in the driver vs the userland library, so I’m not sure if it would work.
As for distro, it doesn’t matter as long as it’s relatively decent. I recommend Linux Mint Debian edition, but I personally use OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.
I saw a question below about Tumbleweed, and you may want to look into OBS, which is OpenSUSE’s way of building whatever libraries you need in a repo. So you’d basically find or build a recipe for your version of CUDA and install that alongside whatever else is in the system (assuming the Docker option doesn’t work). If you’re using a relatively popular stack, chances are someone has already gotten it working.
Just made the switch to Linux Mint today. It has been fairly easy and painless thus far.
I’m doing my part!