Benjamin
- 4 Posts
- 17 Comments
As a young tech trying to get started, Knoppix live CD enabled me to clean viruses and recover data for clients.
After years of using it as a specific tool, I decided to daily drive it when an older machine stopped accepting Windows Updates.
I still run Windows on my big rig, but Debian on everything Else.
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Laptop with Nvidia mx150, gaming questionsEnglish
1·2 years agoI dunno…
But I switched to proton 6.x and dx10 and now it’s running, even if it crashes trying to change the settings.
Now I’ve got to figure out installing mods for single player… Using flatpak…
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Laptop with Nvidia mx150, gaming questionsEnglish
21·2 years agoJust can’t change any of the graphic settings without it crashing.
Running at 1280x720 at 60fps
All lowest settings though. Good enough.
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Laptop with Nvidia mx150, gaming questionsEnglish
21·2 years agoHP Envy 17
I switched to proton 6.x and dx10 and now it’s running 😎
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Laptop with Nvidia mx150, gaming questionsEnglish
11·2 years agoI keep reading that anything below the 2000 series has severe Vulkan limitations… I’m wondering if Windows would perform better? Playable?
I’ve got no clue about video cards, let alone on Linux. I just know I prefer my Debian devices, and this is my first foray into Nvidia and Linux.
Edit: and I assume an MX250 is a 2000 series. Which makes the cut for Vulkan support fwir
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Laptop with Nvidia mx150, gaming questionsEnglish
1·2 years agoIt identifies and loads up the interface.
One process, Xorg @ 4MiB
I’ve got the right click to use card menu, and use that to force flatpak Steam to use it. Then I confirm in game it is selected.
It feels like a huge step down from Intel gfx on an older laptop running Windows…
Benjamin@lemmings.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•IDE Floppy Disk + Debian: anything to consider?English
3·2 years agoSuperDisk™? 😏
Snaps definitely are slower to open. One they get going, they are fine.
But a little slow to load…
Wayland is default on Gnome.
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Bookworm Gnome Live install, no usb after boot?English
1·2 years agodeleted by creator
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
2·2 years agoI found a web site, biosbug.com, and was able to generate an unlock code.
Yeah, really looks like I ought to do a clean install I think.
The system takes forever to boot, but it’s pretty responsive after…
I appreciate the help and info greatly. I’ll eventually get it right! 🤦♂️
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
0·2 years agodeleted by creator
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
0·2 years agoI’ve got an even older machine, Intel Atom, 2Gigs RAM, and I’m running 64bit XFCE4 there quite decently, but thank you for the info. How much longer do you think 32bit has? I thought web browsers already switched to only 64bit?
ZRam is good stuff
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
0·2 years agoI’ve clearly broken something then, because after removing my media files… the install is over 200gigs.
I’m brand new to Gnome; I thought you could freely add Desktop Environments without conflict? I’ve since removed XFCE and am all in on Wayland… I think? Is Wayland the same as XWayland? 🤦♂️
If I install Gnome cleanly, will it still install and use Wayland?
And I discovered my BIOS is password protected 🫣 and I can’t remember it 😢
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
1·2 years agoI didn’t think I had anything held… 🫣
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
1·2 years agoStrange thing is all I’ve ever done is install:
XFCE
Gnome
Firefox was here ootb
And…
an XFCE plugin, docklike taskbar I compiled from source
Scrcpy, android screen mirror I compiled from source
Picom, compositor I compiled from source
Flatpack support, for openRCT
A few themes from internet
One thing I did notice is the Updater in Gnome always sees updates Synaptic doesn’t see. Even now… weird…
On the updated system, running Gnome, it still happens. In addition, installing extensions from Synaptic results in them never appearing (but reported as installed). I have switched to using Extension Manager from Synaptic, and it is able to install extensions properly (they can be used)
I don’t really know much about Linux, which is why I have it on this system… to hopefully gain enough knowledge to be completely comfortable with it. So it is very likely I have inadvertently created a Frankbian 😢
Guess I was looking for confirmation
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
2·2 years agoYeah… I’m thinking the SSD is the route… fresh install…
Your comment about Wi-Fi and net install… yeah… I was assuming my phone set to USB share would work OOTB… probably won’t though, eh?
I think I’ll snag the Gnome install media and just stick with that.
Currently, this system is running very decent. At least as well as it did brand new with original software… except the boot times…
If I go the SSD route, the drive can be left as is in case I totally screw up. I can use the same enclosure from the SSD on the HDD.
Benjamin@lemmings.worldOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Help installing Bookworm (Debian) on Acer laptopEnglish
2·2 years agoThe machine is an Acer Spin3, 7th gen Intel, 12Gigs RAM, Intel gfx

Been using Series Guide for years. Love it.