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Comments 12
Welcome Reddit refugees!
  • I think the elephant in the room is that endless year-over-year growth is unteneble and mathematically impossible. So as the suits get their hands on more and more, they are actually kind of stuck. That means e.g. reddit is unable to operate as normal, not necessarily because they lose money, but because they can't hit unrealistic targets.

  • What OS do you use on your pc and why?
  • Linux. I use Arch on my laptop and PopOS on my gaming rig. Still using Windows on my company laptop, but daily driving Linux on the others for over a year now.

    Really dislike the Microsoft push for telemetry as well as the integrated ads and other processes wasting my resources.

  • 10 years ago Steam released for Linux
  • I remember when it came out and thinking "really? What can you even play?" And then when the Steam boxes seemed to flop, I figured that was the end of that.

    But now I'm hugely happy they stuck to it. SteamDeck is a great success and I've been daily driving linux for gaming for about a year now. Tremendous boon to the community.

  • Is PopOS the best for easy gaming?
  • I've used PopOS as a daily driver on my gaming rig for about a year now. No real complaints and it was definitely great when I had an nvidia card.

    (Though I am looking to switch to Arch soon, since I want to really avoid background processes that I ultimately don't need, and since I switched to AMD and their drivers are in the kernel, I don't need the nvidia help anymore.)

  • Close to switching to a Linux distro full time.
  • If you don't mind doing it one at a time, and you've got a different drive besides the NTFS one (i.e. you're not just looking to just reformat the NTFS volume), this currently works:

    • Format the new drive with whatever, likely Ext4 or Btrfs
    • Install Steam and make a fresh library on the new drive
    • Copy the contents of the NTFS steamapps/common into the new steamapps/common (or copy the individual folders of whatever games you don't want to redownload).
    • Go into Steam, and act like you want to do a fresh install of whatever games you just copied over. Steam will act like it's going to start from scratch, but you'll get "discovering local files" before any downloads start.
    • Steam will either show the game as installed as-is or will update the delta to the current version.

    I use this method also for restoring backups of games to an SSD that live on a mechanical drive.