[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 20 points 3 months ago

This one is especially fun on windows 11 home. At least it was some time ago on some machine i worked on. Since home doesn't have the bitlocker settings fully you cannot disable bitlocker encryption. It would also auto enable sometimes even if you don't have a microsoft account, which means it doesn't back the key up anywhere. Not sure it does that anymore, i hope not, but i expect a lot of people to lose their data to this crap in the future.

In either case at least i find that full disk encryption on most machines is just overkill as it only really protects in the scenario the device is stolen and someone tries to pull data off of it that way. But in the vast majority of cases when people get their data stolen its done with malware, which disk encryption does /nothing/ to prevent.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 26 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

As far as i know most MMOs don't run heavy anti cheat stuff as they are built to not trust the clients so i suspect a lot will work fine.

Some i know work perfectly fine are:

Guild wars 2, both through lutris and proton. Back when i originally swapped to linux i had some issues getting the commonly used dps meter (arcdps) to work with proton. It requires some optional features to be enabled to allow direct x overlay windows etc. Worked first try through lutris though and ive been playing the game on and off for the past year through that without issues.

The Elder Scrolls Online, works perfectly fine through proton. You can even get the standard addon manager (minion) working through standard wine and just point it at the right folder for addons to work. A few that require running programs to update stuff will be fiddly though. (Like tamriel trade centre)

Final fantasy XIV has an unofficial launcher (XIVlauncher) you can snag up on the flathub that makes installing and running the game easy. I have not played the steam version, but i imagine it works as well.

Warframe works fine through steam, but its barely an MMO.

Second life works fine with the common viewer, firestorm, having a native linux version.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 158 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Hey, at least it told you. When i was fiddling to get disney plus working on my own setup it just refused to play until i changed the reported OS to windows. Nothing else was changed. I really have no idea why they would go out of their way to block specific operating systems.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I could see this working for either running cooling and such for refrigerated cargo or if they stick a battery in the trailer. In the latter case it would be possible to just charge it for free while the trailer sits in a lot somewhere. Then when the truck comes they plug in the battery and use the stored up power.

249
submitted 1 year ago by Vahenir@lemmy.world to c/memes@lemmy.ml

Almost 4 years since this happened.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Its been working fine for me over the past year or so since i swapped to linux myself. The launcher looks buggy at times but thats about it. Specifically it will get stuck on "searching for updates" or somesuch while its actually updating. Just leave it to run and it will work as normal anyway.

During my own testing i got the best results with proton 8 and running the game in DX11 mode but DX12 also works. As for a distro i can recommend garuda linux, it was relatively painless to get everything working on that. Their Dr460nized gaming edition comes with a lot of handy stuff preinstalled, which i found useful for just learning about stuff when i first swapped.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I too use Garuda. Running it on both my gaming desktop and my laptop, works really well on both.

11
The memory puns (lemmy.world)

You know its bad when the memory puns the test.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

I can say garuda linux (KDE Dragonized gaming edition) myself if you want to give that a shot. I did swap from windows 11 to that after some testing with other distros it was the one that felt like it just worked out of the box. Unless the game you want to play runs some form of anticheat it will typically work.

I did also get CnC3 working on it through steam/proton. As for how fiddly it is to get games running. If you own them on steam you pretty much just need to go into the properties and flip them over to use whatever the latest proton version is and install as normal. Modding will take a few more steps when it comes to skyrim etc but i havent really tried going into that too heavily myself. Unfortunately the vortex mod manager pretty much explodes if you try to use it on linux so you end up having to install mods manually but there is a mod manager that may do the trick "Mod organizer 2" but I've never used it.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

. . . I use Garuda BTW

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

With 747 that isn't necessary. With the amount of hits the main attack does you get procs relatively often even with the 10% status chance on it.

[-] Vahenir@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

One really like at this time is 747. The damage output is very nice on it. The glaive gets especially fun if you manage to proc void status on an enemy.

Vahenir

joined 1 year ago