alejandro

joined 1 year ago
[–] alejandro@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I use Kagi and never pay more than $10/mo even though I use it a lot. I think most people don’t know how much they search in a month, so the pricing can be confusing.

I have the early adopter pro plan, which gives me extra searches (1500 instead of 1000), but for reference, I averaged 1044 searches/mo over the past 6 months (not counting this month). So if I had the standard pro plan, I’d have paid $10.66 per month on average.

The unlimited plan seems excessive to me, unless you’re playing with the API or something like that.

[–] alejandro@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Did she stop singing, or did she stop being french?

[–] alejandro@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

ACTUALLY it's GNU/Linux (pronounced gu-noo-SLASH-li-nux). I know it's just a "meme", but get your facts straight buddy, this ain't fucking le reddit.

Don't make me have to rm -rf your ass.

 

I would do a poll if I knew how, but screw it.

Which do you use? I use classic controls and I get salty whenever I get destroyed by a modern player even though it’s 100% my fault for sucking.

[–] alejandro@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I've been exclusively using Silverblue (well, Kinoite, which is the KDE version) as my main workstation OS for at least 8 months, and gaming on it is no different from other operating systems. Once you install Steam from Flathub, it all just works. The only difference is that you might need to give Steam permission to access your external drives if you want to add a Steam library on them. KDE Plasma lets you do it from the system settings app easily.

For generic Wine usage, I just use Lutris. Steam does allow you to add non-Steam games and run them through Proton, but IMO Lutris' interface is easier for doing more advanced Wine stuff without having to drop into a terminal. That's personal preference though.

As far as drivers, I didn't have trouble installing the Nvidia driver (I have a 1080 TI). I don't remember exactly what I did to install it system wide, since that was many months ago, but it was easy and well-documented IIRC.

What's more complicated is getting the driver to work in graphical apps launched from toolboxes. If you're doing development, or expect to build graphical software/games from source, you'll likely need to deal with this. Basically, you just need to install the driver again inside of the toolbox, and make sure it's the same version as what's installed on your base system. I have some scripts to automate this if you're interested, but it's not really that useful unless you're planning to use toolboxes a lot.

Overall, I'm very happy with Silverblue/Kinoite. The immutable base system gives me a lot of confidence on the long-term reliability of the system. Originally, I expected it to be a real blocker for most software, but the only thing I couldn't get working was TeamViewer (didn't try that hard tho tbh). I've even been able to get complex stuff to work like Unity, O3DE, Stable Diffusion webui, and a bunch of other AI-related stuff that is normally hard to install even on a regular system.

Fedora Kinoite: 9/10 -- highly recommend