this guy politcs
grow a plant, hug your dog, lift heavy, eat healthy, be a nerd, play a game and help each other out
this guy politcs
to be fair, pedantry is one of our key exports
we also like to refer to our PM as tosser or wanker
very cautious sneef 😊🥰
The picture with your pup is especially sweet. Glad mum came back for the bebi.
oh look at that lil snoot 😊🥰
my best guess would be “cat related things”
There’s also the handy public instance https://send.vis.ee
Good to know, though same could be said for ROCm + HIP for AMD. Gets a bit weird as you generally want that for OCL support too.
This may take time but Intel have extremely deep pockets, they understand the value of presence in this market, I’m sure they can and will stick to it.
There’s no stupid questions here - there’s absolutely nothing intuitive about computer ecosystems 😅
Like AMD, they use a kernel module and their user space drivers are in Mesa. If anything, you may have a better OOTB experience with Intel graphics on distros that have more recent packages, like Fedora.
A third player is absolutely welcome to the game but their share is for now still small on Windows.
The Arc Alchemist dGPU bringup has shown the world just how difficult graphics driver software is. They’ve made excellent progress lately in key areas (on both Windows and Linux) but there are are still many odd gaps to fill.
Battlemage mobile looks pretty exciting, mind you.
I mean, sure but even phoenix based OEM platforms tend to ship with win11 anyways, right? Did any of those release with win10 ootb?
Isn’t the same true for the 7950X3D?
I doubt you would have many issues using win10 on this platform if you wanted to.
It’s not very intuitive but it isn’t so bad once you’re familiar; you can take a look at this whenever’s convenient for you.
When you boot the system, you should briefly see your BIOS splash screen, along with the key combo to get into your BIOS setup menu. Let us know which mainboard vendor you have and we may be able to tell you in advance (For Asus, it’s usually F2, for Gigabyte its the Delete key, for MSI it might be F12 etc). I just mash the specified key when prompted until I’m in.
There’s usually also a key that you can hit to select a temporary boot device (I.e. I can hit F12 on my gigabyte board to select any OS detected by the BIOS, not just boot into the top entry).
Once you’re in, have a look for the ‘Boot’ section. You should have the capability to define your boot order. These entries can consist of traditional disks connected via SATA/SCSI/m.2, USB drives, network locations etc.
You can arrange this boot order however you like.
I would also recommended temporarily disconnecting any existing drives when installing an OS on your system (e.g.: Windows attempts to store its bootloader on SATA 0 by default, even if the OS isn’t destined for that drive).
I’d recommend separate physical disks if possible. Set your boot order via uefi
Sincerest apologies m’kind fellow!