I had a N4000 laptop and it ran… okay. It could do Youtube at 1080p 30 fps but that was about it. On windows it could do up to 4k 30FPS. It is quite a slow CPU but paired with 8 GB of RAM and a decend SSD it’s actually not that bad for web browsing and Office use
From https://docs.getaurora.dev/ “System updates are image-based and automatic. Applications are logically separated from the system by using Flatpaks for graphical applications and brew for command line applications. Workloads for development are containerized.” Correct me if I’m wrong, I’ve never heard of this distro before
That’s the root partition, which is the core system partition. It’s probably read only because Aurora is an immutable system, that means that it doesn’t let you write to the system partition by default
Isn’t it like Ubuntu LTSses? These versions are meant to be as stable as possible with carefully picked packages. Also, happy cake day
Nah… to update the driver I just re run the file and it usually just works (Even in Wayland, on Debian unstable). The only time it broke was when I upgraded to kernel 6.12 and I had to manually install the open source modules because the ones that came with the proprietary ones had an issue that they later fixed, so it’s totally fine now. The only issue I have with the drivers is that when I wake up the PC from sleep I have to restart Plasma (only on Wayland tho)
Mistake? These drivers work much better than the ones in the non-free debian repo, at least for me
I just went full nuclear upgrading my Bookworm install to Trixie and then to Unstable
Ok after viewing your prompts I noticed that mine is kinda lame
GNU/Linux
Rust/Linux
Wait… Was it not released yet? RC1 came out probably more than a month ago
https://github.com/playtron-os/playtron-os Is this the complete repository or it’s just some scripts?
Just use a GUI tool. https://github.com/sezanzeb/input-remapper this one works perfecly fine for me (I’m on Debian tho)
There is no flatpak installed by default on Debian, so by default you get the regular stuff in the apt repositories. But you can install flatpak and then the corresponding plugin for Discover