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Trying to avoid resentment toward Linux

Trying to avoid resentment toward Linux

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Quietvenom
Member
193
06-25-2016, 01:31 AM
#11
Consent is confirmed. Kali is intended for penetration testing, not for regular web browsing. If you require specific tools, they are available for download from the repositories.
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Quietvenom
06-25-2016, 01:31 AM #11

Consent is confirmed. Kali is intended for penetration testing, not for regular web browsing. If you require specific tools, they are available for download from the repositories.

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ItsTimeBomb
Member
119
07-02-2016, 01:15 PM
#12
Based on my trials with my laptop that doesn’t accept Linux, I discovered pop_os is genuinely the most reliable and functional. I’ve never seen it crash, freeze, or behave oddly.
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ItsTimeBomb
07-02-2016, 01:15 PM #12

Based on my trials with my laptop that doesn’t accept Linux, I discovered pop_os is genuinely the most reliable and functional. I’ve never seen it crash, freeze, or behave oddly.

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DUKE_LOKO7
Junior Member
13
07-19-2016, 08:14 PM
#13
You could consider Pop_os or Ubuntu Mate, as they provided excellent support for Optimus previously.
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DUKE_LOKO7
07-19-2016, 08:14 PM #13

You could consider Pop_os or Ubuntu Mate, as they provided excellent support for Optimus previously.

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albint123
Junior Member
46
07-20-2016, 01:35 AM
#14
They're also available on Manjaro and MX Linux. According to what I know, they tend to be quite stable and have good support.
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albint123
07-20-2016, 01:35 AM #14

They're also available on Manjaro and MX Linux. According to what I know, they tend to be quite stable and have good support.

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KablooieKablam
Posting Freak
908
07-20-2016, 04:43 AM
#15
There is no way to change graphics settings on Optimus in Linux. The official Nvidia driver doesn’t allow real-time switching between Intel and AMD. You can use the open-source bumblebeed, though it may have problems with certain cards.
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KablooieKablam
07-20-2016, 04:43 AM #15

There is no way to change graphics settings on Optimus in Linux. The official Nvidia driver doesn’t allow real-time switching between Intel and AMD. You can use the open-source bumblebeed, though it may have problems with certain cards.

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tbat12
Member
68
07-21-2016, 07:14 AM
#16
In fact, their latest beta seems to include support for it. I haven't tested it yet.
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tbat12
07-21-2016, 07:14 AM #16

In fact, their latest beta seems to include support for it. I haven't tested it yet.

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DerpyPhanpy
Junior Member
6
07-21-2016, 09:37 AM
#17
I attempted it but faced some constraints. Currently, only Turing remains power-efficient in "Optimus" mode, making it largely ineffective for saving energy. The only tests that worked were with glxgears and glxinfo; vkcube failed to load, likely due to a 19.10 update issue, though it still ran on Intel systems. Any Steam game I tried, with or without Proton or OpenGL, operated smoothly.
D
DerpyPhanpy
07-21-2016, 09:37 AM #17

I attempted it but faced some constraints. Currently, only Turing remains power-efficient in "Optimus" mode, making it largely ineffective for saving energy. The only tests that worked were with glxgears and glxinfo; vkcube failed to load, likely due to a 19.10 update issue, though it still ran on Intel systems. Any Steam game I tried, with or without Proton or OpenGL, operated smoothly.

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