[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 27 points 11 months ago

Although I’m not surprised, it is interesting that the same big tech companies like Apple and Microsoft taking stances on being “environmentally conscious” while also ignoring forced obsoletion of old hardware. Your average office environment just needs basic email, document/excel editing software and a browser. Now to continue to do these base functions, they have to buy new PCs to do the same exact thing. And it’s not even faster anymore due to the bloat.

If tech wants to preach about the environment, they best start figuring out ways to keep computers out of the landfills.

20
submitted 11 months ago by Russianranger@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

For context - I’m working on getting an emulated Everquest server up and running, but hitting dead ends (probably due to my newness to Linux in general) and seeking some guidance from the community on what I’ve tried and best path forward.

My ultimate goal is to get it running on SteamOS - I have it fully operational on my actual server machine running Ubuntu, but trying to get it working here so I can just connect locally (i.e on a plane) so I don’t need to connect externally. Here is the situation and obstacles;

I've been trying for a minute now to get EQEmu setup on the SteamOS side of the house for ease of launching with client, but running into obstacles in several different directionns, and wanted to see if someone had some guidance on best path forwarrd.

First Route - VM - Linux Mint - Docker - I have a successful server up and running via Gnome Boxes with a Linux Mint guest OS - then docker and akkstakk running on it.

The obstacle - I can't seem to bridge the connection of the guest OS with host OS (guest can ping host, host cannot ping guest). If I can bridge (no pun intended) this gap, it'll most likely be the route I go

Second Route - Distrobox - Ubuntu When running Distrobox directly on SteamOS - I'm trying to get the linux install running - however there is a multitude of issues with permissions being denied. This is likely due to SteamOS' immutable system. To bypass it, it is possible to offset this via turning off read only. However, I don't want to pursue that route, as anything written to the file system gets wiped on update to the OS.

Third Route - WINE - Lutris - SteamOS Another route I've tried is utilizing WINE with the windows installer. I think this could help bypass some of the restrictions of the system while having it run on that.

Obstacle here: Running the .bat file yields the following message - mariadb-10.0.21-winx64.msi: File Not Found Installing MariaDB (Root Password: eqemu) LOADING... PLEASE WAIT... "sh" isn't a recognized shell. Please open an issue at https://git.rootprojects.org/root/pathman/issues?q=sh warning: couldn't access "C:\Program Files\MariaDB 10.0\bin": CreateFile C:\Program Files\MariaDB 10.0\bin: Path not found. PATH not changed.

I tried manually executing mariadb and perl, but it still hangs up at both. I see that i ntuser, it's still not finding them.

So all that to say, trying to find a way to make this work. I'm the closest with the VM, but can't figure out the connection there. Distrobox would be a mess of troubleshooting, and WINE I feel could almost work if I could get the PATHs to work (maybe).

Any input or guidance is widely appreciated for such a niche request.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 31 points 11 months ago

Yes - went from my 512 LCD to the LE OLED. I already upgraded the nvme to a 2tb in the LCD, so I just swapped it out.

Screen is definitely more impressive, but that wasn’t the main reason I upgraded. It was the better battery life that made it worth it. The other efficiencies, upgrades to the controls, were icing on the cake, but battery life far and above was the thing that made it worth it. But as many have said, the screen is damn impressive.

There wasn’t a single shred of buyer’s remorse. But I also play on it every day and tinker with it non stop. So depending on how much you utilize your deck may effect whether it’s worth it for you or not.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 23 points 11 months ago

It’s a subtle difference, but one has trackpads and analog sticks, while the other has analog sticks and trackpads.

29

Wanted to post my experience so far for others that are in the same niche as me, as I didn’t find much on it looking around.

  • Prior to moving my SSD to OLED, I made sure I was current on updates with SteamOS, specifically I was in the Beta branch.

  • I also made sure to download the new APU/SD card drivers on my windows partition. Someone managed to find a wifi driver that works for Windows here - https://oemdrivers.com/network-qualcomm-qcnfa765

  • Haven’t found a working Bluetooth driver yet for windows, so be forewarned on that

  • After the above, I just plucked out the SSD from the LCD over to the LE OLED model - as others have mentioned, be careful of the ribbon cable. I managed to bend back the protective plate enough to get at the screw holding the SSD in place, it was easier getting out than putting back in, but after about 5 minutes of carefully keeping the protective plate peeled back and making sure SSD was properly seated, was able to get screw back in

  • After initial boot with my 2tb SSD, selected the SteamOS boot, got into it, immediately ran another update, restart, and boot straight back to SteamOS.

  • I use Clover as my boot manager, so went into desktop mode and ran the tool, made sure to re-enable the efi partitions again and changed the theme.

  • Restart now brings me to the boot manager, selected my Windows 10 partition

  • On boot, it was oriented in portrait mode (sideways), super easy fix by changing back to landscape

  • Ran APU, SD card, WiFi drivers, everything with those are more operational

  • Windows still missing audio and Bluetooth drivers, but is otherwise functional

Figured to post this to make sure others know what to expect, overall much easier than I thought it was going to be.

17

So I recently moved from Stable to Beta to capitalize on Distrobox being added natively to the deck. I used Distrobox a lot late last year, then after I upgraded to a new SSD, went entirely fresh and stayed in Stable channel.

The problem I’m encountering, I can create a container (created 2 Debian containers and a Fedora container), but I can’t enter any of them. I tried removing and creating new ones to no avail. This is the output I get below. Wondering if anyone has encountered this or if it’s just me, or if there are recommendations on how to troubleshoot.

deck@steamdeck ~)$ distrobox enter debian Container debian is not running. Starting container debian run this command to follow along:

podman logs -f debian

[conmon:e] Include journald in compilation path to log to systemd journal Error: unable to start container "0abddd5ce95420fcfa7b670862258704a724fb270c18176d6e3602a2d99018c6": exit status 1

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 26 points 1 year ago

I’ve said it before, but what makes the Deck unique is the holistic experience it brings. Like a really good chili, it’s a culmination of all the ingredients, particularly the below;

  • SteamOS out of the box
  • Steam Input in combination with the extensive inputs on the Deck itself
  • The ability to easily change core hardware settings via the options menu to influence performance or battery life
  • The extensive third party support via software and peripherals (cases, skins, accessories)
  • Price point
  • Well documented upgradability (SSD replacement, thumbsticks, etc)

I’m all for better screens and hardware, but they always come at a cost to battery life. Not that the Deck has a huge battery life to begin with, but the reason it is passable is due in large part to the hardware it comes with.

The Ally may be beefier spec wise, but at detriment to battery life. Not to mention the Windows OS and lack of inputs (both trackpads and two extra back buttons).

The Legion Go at least accounts for the input selection and has a unique controller setup, but I’m curious to see the battery life to performance ratio. Again, Windows will still be a detriment overall.

Really what it comes down to in the handheld space is finding something that has no compromises from the Steam Deck and an overall increase to performance without affecting battery life so negatively that it becomes a glorified docked laptop.

If I never got a Deck to start, I may have jumped to the Legion Go on account of not having realized what SteamOS brings to the table, and being enticed the beefier specs and control scheme.

However - after having a dual boot setup on the Deck with both SteamOS and Windows, I find myself more and more trying to get games working on the SteamOS side versus the Windows side. This is due to the overall “streamlined” experience of just booting up Game Mode, selecting a game and going off to the races.

Conversely, when I’m on Windows, I can get games operational and semi streamlined via playnite and Glosi, but it still feels clunkier and more obtuse. I pretty much only use Windows for games that I have a single player server running on for some emulated MMOs and that’s about it. If I could get the servers running properly on SteamOS, I’d make the switch in a heartbeat. It’s just trying to find a way to get them running on it with the associated databases/libraries that won’t get it wiped upon update to newer versions.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

Interesting to see Valve at 6.5 bn, I would have guessed they were higher given the extent of Steam as a distribution platform. But I guess that makes sense some other companies have a myriad of other digital and physical products, where Valve has only their small slice in both (Half Life, Counter Strike, L4D, Ricochet for digital, and Steam Deck, Index, some merchandise for physical)

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 26 points 1 year ago

My wife and I watched the whole thing, and I’ve frequently watched LTT in the past. We both agreed that the humor wasn’t really well placed, given the situation and came off a bit cringey in my opinion. I know some folks are saying damned if you do, damned if you don’t, which is fair. However I think that if they kept the humor out and it was a “generic apology video” there would be less criticism about it. But again, that’s just my opinion.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 19 points 1 year ago

He did. He failed the skill check to bring him out. His question was if there was another way to get him if you fail pulling him out of the portal.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 19 points 1 year ago

I don’t think I’ll ever willingly purchase a vehicle with built in subscription services to features already existing in the car. But if I didn’t have a choice, I’d be sure to start looking up ways to bypass it.

The thing that’s alarming is we have this subscription car crap now, which would have been absurd back before 2010 (still is, but even more so then), is that I feel we’re another 20 years from subscription AC cooling in cars. They’ll bypass it by giving access to AC cooling to 82 degrees, but if you want that good cool you’ll need to fork up some dineros

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

Holy shit man. I don’t know what it takes for the death penalty in Australia, but this would be a strong contender in my opinion.

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 89 points 1 year ago

It wasn’t .99 but it was 2.50 at one point, and that was Terraria. Poured over a thousand hours into it. The consistent free mega updates they push out breathe life into it and I’ve been floored how much they’ve supported the game well over a decade since it’s launch. The team there could have just walked away after the 1.1 launch which helped fix some bugs and introduced some new things and called it a wrap. I’m very glad they didn’t

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 26 points 1 year ago

Yup. A quick tap of the horn or double tap is fine. Even a 1 second blast. Once we get into 2 seconds blast territory, it transitions to rude, with 3+ seconds going up linearly on the deranged jackass scale

[-] Russianranger@lemmy.world 24 points 1 year ago

The electrical tape approach is what I did and it did wonders. Went from having a myriad of green and blue LEDs on my fans/portable AC/etc to complete wonderful darkness when I retired for the night. Made a distinct difference in my ability to fall asleep faster at night. I hate having lights when going to bed. Darkness or bust.

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Russianranger

joined 1 year ago