My plan is to buy an NVMe today, install linux as a dual boot, but use linux as a daily driver, to see if it meets my needs before committing to it.

My main needs are gaming, local AI (stable diffusion and oobabooga), and browser stuff.

I have experience with Mint (recently) and Ubuntu (long ago). Any problems with my plan? Will my OS choice meet my needs?

Thanks!

  • xQfcOeZQtBBtGTXt@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    depending on your needs try WSL2 instead of dual booting. I’ve been linux or macos for quite a while in daily work as a programmer and kinda dig on WSL2 in Windows, particularly Win11 with the improved terminal. add Docker in the mix and there’s nothing you can’t do in that kind of environment that you’d be looking to do in a dedicated Linux boot…again dependin on what youre doing i guess.

    • pixxelkick@pathofexile-discuss.com
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      1 year ago

      Largely yes, but I have found WSL2 can kinda trip over itself a little bit when it tries to do serial stuff, sometimes.

      USB device access and whatnot kind of works, but it can be a bit sketch.

      • Celestial@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        WSL is available on Windows Home.
        You’re thinking about HyperV, not the “Virtual Machine Platform”, the former require Pro+, and the latter is available on all (needs to be enabled), and is what enabled WSL, Docker, VirtualBox in HyperV.

        Bad naming IMO and misused by many vendors.