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Cake day: July 3rd, 2025

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  • Then it’s not even a year old. The things that see the most movements performance wise are focused on AMD and NVidia. I’m not convinced there will be a huge difference between what he measured then and what you would measure today. If you are comparing that card with a newer one, the latter will probably get better performance. If the difference in performance is worth the difference in price, only you can decide

    There is https://www.phoronix.com/review/intel-battlemage-linux-may2025/2 but that is not cross-referenced to the other one

    My point is, the last time Phoronix did a review on b580, 9600 was not even on the graph yet. When it comes to gaming hardware on Linux, I don’t know of any better place than Phoronix. He does the tests really using a Linux box, really running games (or computing) and sometimes even runs tests again when there is some big release of Mesa etc.
    But when trying to decide which generation to buy you most probably have to glue together how the thing you are eyeing compares to the other thing, by comparing both to another one that is present in both comparisons



  • Reading your exchange here, one thing comes to my mind. One of the core principles of open source was that if you were distributed something, you have to retain the right and possibility to modify it to your use case. And if you’re going to distribute it yourself, you have to disclose the source of what you distribute. So in the OS spirit, even if creators put guards in place, end users have to be able to modify what was distributed to them



  • How possible is that they will be needing some bleeding edge update of WINE or kernel?

    If you think you can expect that they won’t need to do bleeding edge updates, pick something that is easy to use for you and just choose a WM that will be easy for them

    My grandma and mom use Manjaro with XFCE. Or rather they use XFCE, I use Manjaro on their PCs ;D. They don’t need to update to, for example, NTSync enabled version ASAP, so it’s fine with me just doing an update during some holidays for grandma and over the phone for mom.
    We used to try Mint for their boxes. I was banging my head against it as always with Debian based distros and the effect was that for them the downtimes were longer. Despite our mutual hopes, mom never really got self-sufficient with managing the OS. Even with GUI based package manager. So I just migrated them to Manjaro and now we are all happier. For me the updating is less painful and is faster, for them it just works

    But if you would need to educate such user on how to use some package manager to update something, then maybe there might be some differences between GUI package managers that might help you
    although

    for someone who doesn’t know how to do much more than check their email and log in to Steam

    I think it will be you doing the updating in the end



  • And same argument can be applied to other tech as well: “Linux should be illegal because people can use it to hack computers and send spam.” Or the entire internet can be used as a tool for criminal activities. What does that tell us about the internet? This in itself isn’t very straightforward in my opinion. It needs to be factored in and regulated. But it’s not the same question as should we have AI be part of the world.

    I was thinking similar when reading the article. Going by the logic proposed in it, GIMP development team should be responsible for which images will get mashed together using it