Okay now I understand, thank you for explanation :)
As it says on the banner :P
- 2 Posts
- 9 Comments
digital_descartes@lemmy.mlOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Debian with NVIDIA on a laptop that had been sitting in the closet for yearsEnglish
2·3 months agoI know that. I just wanted to install the drivers strictly on Debian because I love Debian, and it’s the only distro I use. I’d been jumping around between different distros, but after falling in love with LMDE’s stability, I fell in love with Debian, and then I just switched straight to a clean install of pure debian
digital_descartes@lemmy.mlOPto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Debian with NVIDIA on a laptop that had been sitting in the closet for yearsEnglish
21·3 months agoGemini Pro 3 and 2.5 as far as I remember
It may be excitement of something new, I’m a die-hard nonconformist, but I also love it when devices do exactly what I tell them to (which is why, for example, I modified my laptop using UMAF and managed to soft-brick it for the first time in the process :P). Your observation about laptops gives me sadness, because, it’s logical but i have hope that RISC-V laptops will be anyway (what is obvious but not obvious is how anywhere good they’ll be). I may answered your comment a little bit offtopic or chaotic, sorry, but i think you get my point :)
What do you mean?
I know, and i think that i will end up with something like RISC-V as portable laptop and big AMD64 pc for doing heavy things via ssh or directly
Thank you, (and others) for helping me understand this thing, maybe this answer is a little off-top but with that info i will be able to learn (sure i can search in internet but i need basis to know what I need to search) :), i’m not new to cpu and it things but risc-v is somewhat difficult to me.
I know, I mean, I want to use computer from 2028 in 2030, having hope that software will optimize, unlocking full potential of this devices (if there will be any in 2028 laptop)

https://riseup.net/en/vpn