I’ve had no problems compressing Blu Ray MKVs into MP4s with handbrake (using MX Linux). My drive is a branded, internal one (I want to say LG or Asus.) I am at work right now, by I can look at the model number when I get home if you want. Interestingly, I have actually used it on both German Blu Rays and North American ones.
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janNatan@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•when will gimp 3.0 get updated on the linux mint (or ubuntu!! or whatever linux mint uses) package manager??2·2 months agoI was born in 1990, and I had a Teddy Ruxpin bear.
janNatan@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•This Week in KDE Plasma: Better fractional scaling143·5 months agoSHHH! Don’t tell Gnome that there are options other than 100% and 200%.
janNatan@lemmy.mlto Linux@lemmy.ml•Yo, I found this for 380$ should I buy it and how well does Linux run on it, if you have one of this is it a good in term of build quality8·7 months agoMy husband has had an MSI bravo for a few years. Uses it constantly, and it’s great. No issues outta it whatsoever. However, he does not use Linux on it. He prefers to dual boot and the SSD is a little small for that (if you also want to install games).
Sir, a 17th Zorin OS has hit the download page.
I have no experience with setting up Windows after Linux. I’ve always done it the other way around.
However, what version of Windows was it running before? If you haven’t switched the components yet, you can use Windows to make a Windows boot flash drive or DVD officially using the “Windows Media creation Tool.” It’s a free download from an official Microsoft page. I don’t think you needed to buy Windows 11 at all. Both windows 10 and 11 will recognize that your hardware (motherboard mostly, I believe) is registered with a license, and it will simply activate your Windows online, no hassle. It’s like the one thing Microsoft got right.
Thankfully, nvidia actually released open source drivers for their cards a couple years ago or so. Nvidia cards are much more compatible with Linux now than they used to be.
Proton is a Windows compatibility layer for games developed by Valve for Steam. It’s based on Wine. Wine originally stood for WINdows Emulator, but it now stands for “Wine Is Not (an) Emulator,” which I always found funny. Technically, it is translation layer for system calls, I think. It’s very good these days!
But really, the only thing to know about Proton is that for any game in Steam, you can go into the “compatibility” preferences and enable Proton for that game. This can allow Windows games that Valve doesn’t support to work in Linux. It’s not perfect, however. ProtonDB (database) is a website full of user reviews of how well Proton works with games. They will tell you what tweaks they used to get games working!
Hey, friend. I just wanted to let you know that I couldn’t get New Vegas to run on my (up to date) Linux PC until I installed the custom Proton version called “Proton GE.” The GE stands for Glorious Eggroll, which is the username of the developer. There’s guides on how to install it on the GitHub’s readme. I know it may sound complicated to someone new, but you can do it!
Here’s a link to the read me: https://github.com/GloriousEggroll/proton-ge-custom?tab=readme-ov-file#manual
Scroll down to the “native” install instructions.
Of course, you can ignore this if New Vegas just works for you as it seems to for many others. My system is MX Linux, not Mint.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?3·1 year agoI could, but I have no aptitude for visual art. I’d sooner buy one of the vintage Linux boxes. And I may very well do that.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?10·1 year agoCan I make my own Linux install media? Yes. I do it all the time. Can I make my own software box with cool artwork and booklets and various other goodies? No.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?5·1 year agoThank you. I see the DVDs and the USB sticks, but how can you tell which ones actually come as a box set? It’s really the box I’m interested in.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?3·1 year agoWie komisch! I actually know German, but they don’t deliver to the USA. Thank you, though.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?2·1 year agoA play? No, I just saw an old Linux box and wondered if anybody still made them.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?7·1 year agoThanks. I was hoping for an actual set in like a cardboard box.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?3·1 year agoSackware Store seems to be down right now. Unfortunate.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?5·1 year agoMostly just purely nostalgic reasons, computer software in boxes.
janNatan@lemmy.mlOPto Linux@lemmy.ml•Are there still any versions of Linux sold in a box like in the 90s / 2000s?1·1 year agoActual box for display.
I decided to fully convert to Linux on my living room PC because I was convinced these random display drops I was getting were being caused by Windows. (I was right.)
I had a drive that I wanted to leave alone, because it had my videos and music and such. I wanted to try a new (to me) distro, so I just started using high rated ones I found on distro watch. The first two I tried (I honestly forget which) would NOT leave my video drive alone during installation (even with advanced options). The third one was MX, and it successfully installed while leaving my video drive alone. I liked that. I am used to xfce, and I like some of the custom little tweaks that MX adds to it, like easily making custom folder themes. I like that it can install .deb files and pretty much everything I’ve tried to run so far has worked.
So, yeah, that’s why I like MX. I have since installed it on my laptop, my office PC, and my husband is dual booting it. It even runs his v-tube software, which blew us away. I know most of this isn’t unique to MX, but it just seems to work really well for us.
Even if it did work, why would you do it? You’d still be playing League of Legends.
Also, libre office has randomly crashed for me on multiple distros now, while doing really mundane things like… resizing a window or trying to save the document as PDF.
I will second only office. It’s more stable for me.