ryokimball

joined 2 years ago
[–] ryokimball 84 points 3 hours ago (9 children)

They are outright admitting their orders are unlawful?

[–] ryokimball 10 points 23 hours ago

Some people write novels and epics to never be seen. Some people build castles that only they will ever step foot in.

[–] ryokimball 2 points 3 days ago

Thanks for sharing, I'll look into this!

[–] ryokimball 13 points 1 week ago (2 children)

That is on the steam machine page, not the steam frame.

The frame page says

Quick suspend/resume. Cloud saves. All the features of SteamOS that make for a great user experience are now available in VR. Just like any SteamOS device, install your own apps, open a browser, do what you want: It's your PC.

Still, very similar... But not quite explicitly stating the OS is replaceable.

[–] ryokimball 5 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Just realized... We can probably plug the frame into a dock.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by ryokimball to c/linux@lemmy.world
 

Valve has been Linux friendly. It says the new steam frame "is a PC" and will run Steam OS but I feel like there's an insinuation that, like the steam deck, you can install whatever you like. I am cautiously excited at the premise of really digging in and having a Linux box strapped to my face.

Another friend has already referred to it as the Linux Vision Pro.

Edit: watching Linus tech tips review, it mentions side loading Android APKs as well

[–] ryokimball 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Can you just point the second to the first?

[–] ryokimball 22 points 1 week ago (1 children)

First that comes to mind is Itchy and Scratchy (The Simpsons)

[–] ryokimball 5 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

It's not that routers are routers and servers are servers, But computers are computers. If the hardware can support the software you want to run, then do it.

[–] ryokimball 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I want to say iGPU makes things easier, not because of experience but only because I tried passing through an Nvidia card and the instructions all insinuated this was more difficult than any other option

[–] ryokimball 1 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

There is a helper script for jellyfin LXC. From memory I can't help much, but I suggest searching for that. I think the default specs for disk space and RAM were weak, But setup was easy enough. After the initial helper script, you will need to learn how to mount the NAS into the LXC as well.

[–] ryokimball 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I'm unfamiliar with this particular device but I have encountered several where the listed max RAM is not a hard limit, for one reason or another.

[–] ryokimball 1 points 3 weeks ago

No SD card :-/

 

I have successfully passed through a GPU to a full VM for gaming, but since reverted that to a standalone installation. So I know passthrough is possible/I'm capable of implementing it.

That said, I'm trying to plan out some clustering across at least three machines, two with GPUs and only one of those has any real heft. My understanding is that, with most/normal consumer hardware, there is not an option to split GPU load across multiple containers or VMs; once passthrough is set up, it is dedicated to that instance.

I am wondering, is this true even if I orchestrated spin up/down of the instance? For instance, can LXC1 have the GPU until I shut it down, then spin up LXC2 or VM3 to take over that same GPU without reconfiguring and restarting the host? IIRC configuring the passthrough suggested this wasn't possible but I'll have to experiment to be sure, or rely on Lemmy's expert opinion (-:

My assumption for now is that I just need to have a single guest per GPU (or buy a much more expensive card).

 

I don't actually care, but odd that every installation does this.

 

Just heard about this on a podcast, and I've often looked for ways to put my skills to use on a volunteer basis. This would probably also be an excellent resume builder for students / aspiring cybersecurity professionals.

 

I got a stack of PCS that are very similar if not identical. Third gen i7, 8 gigs of ram, one terabyte hdd, all but one are the same HP model with the same motherboard, etc too. I upgraded the RAM in a few of them, and I have enough spare TB hard drives to put an extra in each. Two have Nvidia GeForce 210 gpus, and the unique one out of the bunch I'll probably throw in a spare RX 570 I have.

But, what to do with them? Easiest answer is probably sell them all for $75 each but that's not what we do here, right? Right now I'm assuming they all support w o l and I can easily set up ansible/awx for orchestration. I'm just looking for some fun experiments, projects, or actual uses for this Tower of PC towers

 

To begin I'll say this is something I've noticed with Firefox, but because it's Snap-centered I think this is the place to post. I have two primary machines which recently had Firefox "wiped clean" like they were brand new installs. They also had notifications suggesting the version of Firefox was not the official way to use FF in the given operating system (Kubuntu 24.04 on both machines). It suggested using the official Debian repo instead, which I figured why not and re-installed from there (after uninstalling the Snap first).

I guess I'm asking if anyone else is experiencing this? Am I right in pointing blame at Snap or is this possibly an elsewhere issue?

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