My wife is Australian, but we live in Germany now. Last year, she was craving "Honey Chicken" which is ubiquitous at Chinese takeaway places in Australia. None of the Chinese places in Germany knew what I was talking about. Turns out Honey Chicken is a purely Australian invention.
If game development interests you, it's a great hobby. You don't need to be knowledgable, but it helps if you like logic puzzles, because programming is basically solving one logic puzzle after the other.
I can't speak about Bazzite, but I installed Mint for a friend about two months ago and he was totally able to web search himself through a few problems. I didn't have to intervene at all.
Perfectly sealed and every recycling plant on the planet can (and will) deal with it. I'm not even mad. It likely stays hot for quite a while and you can probably still eat it a week later.
In Japan, there is tax benefits if your car fits certain dimensions. That's why there are so many small boxy cars in Japan.
I don't understand why this isn't a thing anywhere else. It has so many benefits: Fuel economy, parking space, pedestrian safety, …
But no, "I can see better if I sit higher" is still the #1 killer argument for these urban tanks.
If the GPU is very shitty: Elementary OS (Mint Cinnamon expects a basic level of GPU performance)
If Mint/Elementary are too simple: Fedora KDE
Process:
For fully switching: Obtain an external hard drive, copy the contents of the Windows partition(s) to it and install your preferred distro so that it takes over the entire computer. This is the most stable way.
For dual booting: Buy an SSD for Linux, disconnect the Windows drive and install your distro of choice so that it takes up the entire space. Reconnect the Windows drive afterwards and set boot priorities in UEFI.
One More Tip:
Don't frontload them with information, but teach them one thing: How search for and install packages through the GUI (Mint Software Manager/Elementary Store/KDE Discover). Tell them that it's more like a smartphone apps and downloading software from websites should be a last resort.
Unfortunately, SteamVR on Linux has a flickering bug that hasn't been fixed in years, making games unplayable if the game is running at anything less than full FPS. It's fine if you play less demanding games, though.
(I use Valve Index and AMD RX 7900 XT)
If you use Envision instead of SteamVR, it works perfectly smooth. However, Envision isn't fully compatible with all games. I got a particular issue where the wrist positions are slightly misplaced in VRChat, but there are already WIP changes to fix that.
So, all in all, not great, but it works. I hope SteamVR improves when Valve's new headset comes out.
Could it be that you're running out of VRAM? The NVIDIA driver is unable to swap VRAM to RAM, so even just a tiny bit of leakiness of the game will make performance eventually deteriorate when VRAM fills up.
I convinced my wife to dual booting Linux Mint. She uses it every now and then, but she primarily still uses Windows 10. I hope she will abandon it once she sees this. She absolutely detests ads of any kind.
Thank you all for your ideas, I managed to solve the problem. It was somewhat hardware related, but not really.
I was using BTRFS, which creates a lot of write amplification and aged SSDs don't handle that well. According to a study from 2017, btrfs can cause up to 32x write amplification, absolutely hammering its performance: https://ar5iv.labs.arxiv.org/html/1707.08514
I converted my system to RAID0 using EXT4 and the stutters and freezes are gone.
Try searching it on https://btdig.com/, a DHT search engine. Most of the torrents there are very old and have barely any seeds. Be patient. The last thing I downloaded from there took 1-2 weeks to complete.
My wife is Australian, but we live in Germany now. Last year, she was craving "Honey Chicken" which is ubiquitous at Chinese takeaway places in Australia. None of the Chinese places in Germany knew what I was talking about. Turns out Honey Chicken is a purely Australian invention.