• chingadera@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I’m fucking out. I do a lot of basic IT work, including many fresh installs and new domain users, and I am so godamn sick of having to go through 5 dialogues every single time I open edge. For the local account. Then the domain admin account. Then the domain user account. Fuck this company.

    As soon as I can afford to get an AMD GPU or do a swap with someone for my 1070, I’m gone. I used to love computers, but dealing with windows even on a home PC with no “problems”, it just feels like more work.

    • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      oh for what it’s worth. I’ve been using my 1070 under arch with nvidia drivers for years now. It’s problematic sometimes, and configuration is a mess. But it generally works perfectly fine.

      It’ll work more than well enough just to test the waters in linux though.

      although, to be clear, i am still on X, i hear it’s worse on wayland. But I’d say X is worthwhile if you’re savvy enough. It’s an interesting piece of software history. (and it rarely updates)

      • chingadera@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        This seems promising, do you have any resources I can check out to accomplish the switch? I’ve used some Linux, mostly Debian, so really don’t think it would be all that tough to go through.

      • keyez@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I’m going AMD next as well, pop wouldn’t run games on my 3080, finally got some running on endeavourOS currently but pop and fedora had lots of issues.

        • zod000@lemmy.ml
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          7 months ago

          PopOS has been running games fine on my 3070 for many years at this point. It might be worth another try.

          • keyez@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I just tried in February but could be because of the protocol either Wayland or X11, I run 2 1440p 144hz monitors and I think Wayland struggles with that. Have had better luck with arch and KDE x11

    • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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      7 months ago

      You can do it with an Nvidia GPU too, you don’t have to switch cards. I’m not sure where this idea comes from, that Nvidia doesn’t work on Linux, 50-60% of users are on Nvidia according to Steam.

      • Whayle@kbin.social
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        7 months ago

        It’s because out of the box there’s often issues. For example, my setup with a 3080 booted to a black screen at login. Only futzing in the command prompt via grub let me install the correct driver, and it’s been fine ever since then.

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          7 months ago

          All drivers have to deal with fbdev and EFI DRM shenanigans and there’s no simple solution (if you insist on hiding boot messages behind pretty graphics, or having a graphical console, which most distros do unfortunately, God forbid you should kernel and system messages for 3 seconds).

          Until the ancient fbdev stuff will finally be completely obsolete it’s all about compromise. Most often the distro will have a working default, in some corner cases it will backfire. Personally I set my console to text only so I don’t have to deal with any of this.

          TLDR it can happen, and not necessarily on Nvidia.

    • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      You can disable or streamline that stuff with either group policy or registry keys.

      I used to do the same work (several years ago) and I started researching fixes and writing scripts to speed up my work.

      Make a to do list of what your computer setup process is. Figure out the earliest you can launch a script (netshare or usb). Then start writing scripts for your tasks.

      Installing apps, file transfers and system configs.

      • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        That seems like a lot of convoluted bullshit just to get your os to work, considering you need to update the whole thing every week.

        You sure you haven’t tried arch? Openbsd? You sound like a typical user.

        • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          I’m talking about supporting an American enterprise environment that handles medical patient data. No Linux workstations really. Easier to comply with HIPAA that way.

          Is it convoluted BS? Sure why not. But Microsoft services are really sticky once you get integrated at a large scale (5k workstations plus over 100 servers).

          • melpomenesclevage@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            And when they withdraw support for that feature, do you think laws will cause all the computers to crash?

      • chingadera@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Unfortunately our setup is not that sophisticated and neither am I. It’s a goal we’re working toward, but we’re just caught in a loop doing archaic shit because the workload is too high to fix it.