Originally posted by starshipeleven
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Fedora Has Deferred Its Decision On Stopping Modular/Everything i686 Repositories
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For the record this year I decided I had had enough of being on call 24x7x365 so started a photography & videograhy company. All my editing, cutting etc gets done on Darktable, GIMP, Davinci Resolve & ffmpeg with one exception. I dn't use them becuase they are cheper than other though they definitely are. I use them becuase I have tried the CC suite and think it just doesn't work as well as the Linux based tools I have. The one thing I have to spin up a Windows VM for is converting my Canon CR3 RAW files to DNG. When the next version of libraw ships this fall that should no longer be a problem. BTW most windows apps are also still having issues with CR3 files.
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Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostI already said what I do to get shit running, I'm an IT guy, not a developer.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostChroot with the kitchen sink works well enough. Packaging is just a matter to have scripts on top of my hack.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post"Windows platform" still means Windows 10. You aren't going to be using productivity apps on an Xbox if you can avoid it.
Anyway, my point is that "modern" not always mean "better".
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post1. Windows 64bit runs fine with 2GB for a single application
It wouldn't be a problem if RAM was allocated dynamically.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post2. That's what we do when software developers can't fix their shit, I know it's bad but it works and that's what most of the world is doing right now to keep trucking on (yes this is an issue that isn't just for people on Linux)
Even Walt Disney was using Photoshop on WINE.
miladus writes "eWeek reports that Walt Disney's feature animation unit (along with 2 other unnamed studios) are using Adobe's Photoshop in Linux. They use the Wine emulator to run the software and the 3 studios 'not known as team players, all three agreed that a project that would benefit the entir...
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostI don't. In its current status I have less than 50% chance of being able to run something in Wine unless it is some special well-known software.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostBullshit, I've not seen significant differences outside of workstation software.
You can say that just one random test proves nothing. However, in real-world applications, I have seen even a several-fold increase in performance. This means that in a quarter of an hour you can do something that normally takes over an hour.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostIt works fine even with Virtualbox's crappy virtual GL driver
I've installed fresh and latest Fedora 26 as a VM and when I'm trying to use it, I'm receiving slow GUI response and overall graphic performance is bad. I've tried to use 3d acceleration as well, so the guest starts normally but when GUI part is loaded and login window appeared it's starts to work so slowly, that it's impossible to do anything.Originally posted by starshipeleven View Postwith VMWare that supports actual DX11 too it's great.
At most, it is usable to render desktop GUI, but nothing more than this.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostKVM also has similar drivers but I don't use them much so I don't know. It does not lag anymore, I can tell you this.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostBut it works reliably once it is set up, and requires little if any mainteneance.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostThe same can't be said for Wine or the whole goddamn circus of crap you need to keep to actually play on Linux, or god forbid, actually use some Windows work software.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostBecause it's basically turning Linux into a lowerl-evel Windows shim without providing any form of security and sanboxing, i.e. it's NOT an evolution but a sidegrade at best.
If I want a shit unsafe system to run Win32 applications I can just install Windows (or "not uninstall it" from the hardware I buy).
Moreover, Microsoft has no problem with supporting WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux), because they now that compatibility and interoperability matters. Just think about it.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostAnd even to get there you need a monumental amount of work on the Wine side that isn't really happening (and won't happen unless there is a sudden and mysterious influx of developers)
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostYou mean Debian compiles and offers packages/images for these archs. Who knows if that stuff actually still works at all?
People said Red Hat/Fedora/Canonical don't have the proper infrastructure or resources. I've proven it's not true.
People said Red Hat/Fedora/Canonical don't have enough maintainers to make patches for i686. I've proven it's a myth.
Now, you suggest that they may not have enough time to test it, although there are plenty people who use it. Sorry, but you are pushing where there's nothing.
As I said before, I have created hundreds packages. Many of them required patches and hacks for PPC or ARM. However, patches for x86-32 hardly exist, because there is no need for that. There is only a one exception here. In some cases, software like WebKit may have a problem to build on 32-bit arches because of memory issues. It is because GNU Gold Linker and BFD may consume to much memory (over 4 GB). But this problem affects only extremely complex software. What's more, it affects ARMv7 as well. But I don't see people who wants to drop support for 32-bit ARM. This hysteria affects only x86-32.
Anyway, multiarch/multilib support doesn't mean that we need all packages to be compiled for i686. About a thousand packages is just fine. And believe me, it doesn't stop Linux development in any way.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostThat's exactly what I'm saying, I'm just advocating for a true modern solution that is implemented now with the lessons learned in the last two decades.
However, people want to use Linux today. Not in 3, 5 or 10 years, but just right now. If we don't focus on the present, Linux desktop will end up like Plan 9, Inferno, JavaOS, Singularity or Midori - nothing more than a curiosity project. We need a reliable solutions today, then we can think about the future improvements.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostWine and porting over the Win32 API is NOT what I would like to see.
Just look at Windows RT. It was a modern operating system, but it failed because of lack of applications. It proves exactly what I said before - no system without a decent software base can capture market-share. The only exception is the emergence of a new hardware platform, like it was with smartphones in 2007.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostI would like to see something along the lines of Android, and Flatpak is where this is at.
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Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostIf for some reason I have to use shit like Ultrabooks for purely esthetic reasons, I would be running Windows, period.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostAlso, wtf are you doing on an ultrabook that needs NVENC or QSV
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Postthey are toys for management (i.e. Office machines) not workstations.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Postruns decently only a handful of programs, while most don't run or run like shit.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostI don't care about the theoretical list of API supported (like NVENC), IN PRACTICE it's a crapshoot to get anything to work with it unless you are in for a fun week of tuning and are half-developer, or happen to need one of the few applications that are in gold or better status
Originally posted by starshipeleven View Post(and later versions of Wine didn't break this status, as sometimes happens).
BTW, Windows Update can also cause some troubles. The news portals are full of it. Personally, I think that they are exaggerating. But it doesn't mean that the problem doesn't exist at all.
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Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostWrong. It works fine for applications that don't need strong 3D acceleration. 3D acceleration is available so the GUI works and does not lag, but it's not strong enough to do much more than rendering the GUI without lagging.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostWhat if I told you that copy-paste works with Virtualbox and VMWare (and KVM too for that matter)?
There are also special shared folder settings that allow me to passthrough to the VM as a "network drive" all necessary folders (this is not SMB, it's using its own internal system for VB and VMWare, KVM uses 9P protocol). In many occasions I'm literally only reading and writing to this filesystem with the applications in the VM.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostThat's because the Virtualbox 3D acceleration driver is basic. VMWare's one is better, but still gaming is outside of its abilities.
Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostKVM is decent and they are developing that VirGL thing as a more powerful virtual 3D GPU, exactly for the desktop usecase https://virgil3d.github.io/
Originally posted by the_scx View PostOriginally posted by Virgil projectIt leaks like a sieve.
It fails a lot of renderering.
It crashes some drivers.Originally posted by the_scx View PostYou said before that OpenGL 4.4 is required for games (which is not entirely true), and VirGL just recently got support for OpenGL 4.1. Even Apple has supported OpenGL 4.1 for years! And at the moment, VirGL does not support Vulkan at all. Literally 0 percent of this API is implemented!
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Phoronix, Linux Hardware Reviews, Linux hardware benchmarks, Linux server benchmarks, Linux benchmarking, Desktop Linux, Linux performance, Open Source graphics, Linux How To, Ubuntu benchmarks, Ubuntu hardware, Phoronix Test Suite
What's worse, two years ago performance was just terrible, like even less than 5% of native performance for Unigine Valley Benchmark.
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Of course, they could made some progresse since that time, but I believe that it is still pretty useless for modern games.
VirGL has existed for several years, but even with support from Red Hat, its development was very slow. Recently, they have made some noticeable progress, but it is only thanks to Google. They are interested in VirGL because of their Project Crostini that allows running Linux applications on ChromeOS. But still, it will be at least several years before VirGL be suitable for modern games.
https://blog.simos.info/a-closer-look-at-chrome-os-using-lxd-to-run-linux-gui-apps-project-crostini/At Google I/O 2018, one of the presentations was on What’s new in Android apps for Chrome OS (Google I/O ’18). The third and most exciting developer tool shown in the presentation, was the ab…
Originally posted by Xaero_Vincent View PostSeems like a lot of the commits are coming from Google. Google must have vested interest in harnessing this work for their Project Crostini for Chrome OS.Originally posted by the_scx View PostAnd of course, it requires a recent kernel, so it is not suitable for LTS distributions with stable kABI.Originally posted by starshipeleven View PostBut really, as I said I have a dedicated rig for gaming, also to keep some separation for security reasons.
Of course, I am not going to force you to anything. On the other hand, you want to force people to abandon something that works for them. Just think about it.
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