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Posts
26
Comments
364
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I think that is simply because it was some new random distro. I bet debian or fedora with kde and the discover app would be just fine for most people.

  • I would recommend trying other distros in a VM to see how you like them. Arch gets updates really fast, so stuff does break. A point release distro will also have updates that break them, but they will be at scheduled times and usually the old one is supported for a while. Also, fedora has hyprland as a package. It may be rpmfusion, but you should be able to install with dnf install hyprland.

  • I did notice it was the wrong device, however when I specify it crashes the whole os with some artifacting. I may look into other values for that environment variable tomorrow. I also might try rusticl.

  • Well I tried an opencl benchmark I found, and my computer has fuckied a major wucky...

    Edit: reboot fixed it but it seems opencl is super unstable on here. I ran hashcat again, this time with --force, and found that it did nothing, then there were weird colors, then plasmashell crashed. Luckily plasmashell has good crash handling and it was able to go back up so I could see that hashcat reported something about gpu hang being the reason for the crash.

  • I tried both suggestions, as well as running it without the variables changed. On all three of them, hashcat said "Device #3: Unstable OpenCL driver detected!" when I ran hashcat -I (device info if your not familiar with hashcat). I tried running the benchmark, and it crashed saying "Device #1: Kernel /usr/lib64/hashcat/OpenCL/shared.cl build failed."

    Edit: I looked, and I don't see a package called rocm-ocl, nor can I install one. Edit2: Wait nvm, I see rocm-opencl, and I assume that's it.

  • Holy crap, really? I used it a while ago, and have been using it recently in the form of asahi. That would be seriously great if that works, and thank you so much for the suggestion.

  • Mesa clover opencl has only 40% of the extensions implemented. I suspect hashcat needs some that it doesn't have, if I am understanding that correctly.

  • Igpus are used for transcoding.

  • Oh please, I don't need Satan as an excuse to sacrifice children.

  • It's done as a whitelist and they issue devices.

  • Yeah. The school I go to uses MAC based blocking on their network, and it is otherwise an open network.

  • You don't need a specific distro to compile your code. Just install gcc or javac or whatever you need.

  • If it is a newer Mac (Apple silicon), asahi is your only option that I know of. It is good but idle and sleep power management leave something to be desired. If not, I would recommend debian. It is stable, so you don't have to worry about an update breaking it right before a class or anything like that.

  • To add to that, (or maybe you said this, forgive me if so I am sick RN and my brain is not working optimally), there's no such thing as a trusted network, and many ways to trick devices into connecting. Evil twins are clones of nearby networks that you will connect to instead. There's also an attack where your device is actively sending out requests to connect to saved networks, and an attacker can simply respond to that request to get you to connect, and authenticate regardless of what password you send.

  • Wow, activitypub got multiverse federation working?

  • Well it isn't really CPU vs GPU. It is integrated vs dedicated GPU. A CPU certainly can transcode, but not well. A lot of CPUs have integrated graphics which can handle transcoding quite well. I went with an Intel arc a380 because I know quite a lot of people could hit it under some circumstances. For most people though, I would recommend an Intel CPU with quicksync. What you really should spend your budget on IMO is as much storage as you can.

  • If you are made out of matter stay away from manjaro. Other than that I agree, and would recommend debian slightly over fedora but that is just personal preference. Also I feel like opensuse deserves an honorable mention. Maybe not tumbleweed, but leap could be suitable for a new user and yast rocks.

    Edit: Also vscodium can be good alternative to vscode. It is vscode without Microsoft's tracking, but an exact copy otherwise.

  • I don't have this problem exactly, but what I would recommend is putting it in a specific separate library. You could even set it up so only your mother's account can access it, and you never have to see it, or you could have it visible but never go to it.