For the Steam Folders, you can use Flatseal to declare other folders any Flatpak you install is allowed to access
For the Steam Folders, you can use Flatseal to declare other folders any Flatpak you install is allowed to access
Google is certainly planning on it being viable.
They’ve been merging RISC-V support in Android and have documented the minimum extensions over the base ISA that must be implemented for Android certification
Thanks! That sounds like exactly what I’d want to run mpd. I’ll check it out
For virtualization, I’m all good since I went with uBlue instead of Silverblue for now - the developer images come with lxc/lxd/qemu/libvirt :)
Hey! Thanks!
I’ve installed Aurora to my new drive based off the comments here so far, and it’s been pretty smooth bringing my configs over :)
Immutable is new to me, so I’m wondering how you manage host daemons and cli applications, such as mpd for music and password-store for password management
Is the best practice to keep one Fedora <current release> distrobox with them?
Also, are there any issues with upgrading a distrobox to a new major release over time?
So far my mindset has been make sure I don’t layer anything, but maybe some things like mpd do make sense to layer?
I also see brew
as another option. Perhaps that’s the preferred way for those types of tools? However, it seems like the system upgrade script updates distrobox and not brew?
Sorry for the rambling question - just trying to understand best practices with an immutable distro 😅
When I check out the ISO for microOS, it lists microOS Kalpa as “alpha”
Is it ready to be used as a primary install?
The developer image, dx, includes rocm-hip and rocm-opencl:
https://github.com/ublue-os/bluefin/blob/main/packages.json
The packages under “dx” are the main reason I’m considering it over stock Fedora
How does bluefin fit in the dependency chain here - is this just the repository that builds official uBlue images?
Part of my confusion is trying to understand how these projects are related to each other
Edit - oh, I guess bluefin is the Gnome variant
The RK3588 is pretty nifty, and is the first Mali GPU (610) where ARM themselves have contributed the firmware upstream and have helped with Collabora with Panfrost development
Bleeding edge, still, but kernel 6.10 and Mesa 24.1 have GPU support
HDMI TX and DSI/CSI are still in-progress
I’m working off the assumption you are using one GPU for the host and one for the guest
The guest one is permanently blacklisted on the host, and you can select the passthrough settings in the GUI
If you’re dynamically detaching the GPU, my statement was incorrect
Wow! I didn’t expect sched_ext to be accepted based off historical precedent of not allowing multiple schedulers
I thought the focus would be on optimizing EEVDF now
They’re saying that it only works if your browser is installed natively and your password manager is sandboxed, which is the exact opposite of what you’d want
The browser is the vulnerable software that needs sandboxing
Both being sandboxed would be fine, too
The software has improved a lot since I got the phone in 2022 (I pre ordered it in 2017)
I would be willing to use it as a daily driver if it had better battery life
As the other poster said, the camera is kind of crap, but I don’t take many pictures. At least you don’t have to manually set the exposure/balance/focus to take a picture now, though
The updater has been a little flakey and I’ve just fallen back to update via command line frequently
Fairly thick, but it feels quite sturdy to me. SD card slot and headphone jack are great. Charging speed is kind of slow
If your motherboard supports it, it’s really easy
Ensure IOMMU is enabled and run the little script in section 2.2 to see if you can isolate the graphics card
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PCI_passthrough_via_OVMF
After that, you can do everything in the virtual-manager GUI
If you’re relying on iMessage for privacy, ensure you and everyone you’re messaging have gone to iCloud settings and enabled “Advanced Data Protection”
They do when Qualcomm wants to use their processors in Android phones
Qualcomm has, so far, been extremely against upstreaming drivers. Google has told them they can’t touch the kernel anymore over it
If that’s actually changing, it could be huge for a real alternative
I don’t use PIA, but /opt and /etc are both r/w in Silverblue/Kionite
I can’t say for all of them, I just knew that e.g. the z790 chipset still ran the ethernet phy, audio dsp, SPI, their version of TrustZone, etc through the chipset
https://www.funkykit.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/intel-z790-chipset-diagram.jpg
If you have the block diagrams for the laptop ones, I’d be curious
I enjoy that they literally did. The article says the OTA update is just to ignore a hardware sensor
Which begs the question, why was that sensor needed originally?
You have to enable developer mode and install with
--bypass-low-target-sdk-block
now.Dunno if they’ll remove that eventually