My friend has a 2080 in his and he’s been able to play monster hunter wilds without much issue. It does support nvme.
(He’s on pop os)
Edit: that 6700 is a limiting factor in some titles. BeamMP really likes high core count CPUs.
My friend has a 2080 in his and he’s been able to play monster hunter wilds without much issue. It does support nvme.
(He’s on pop os)
Edit: that 6700 is a limiting factor in some titles. BeamMP really likes high core count CPUs.
GTX 745 is weird. It’s early Maxwell, not Kepler. It’s not particularly fast and as it is Maxwell, only supports fp32.
That’s the last ATX compliant xps PC. I’d swap the wifi card for something else. It has some issues. That bug was patched out afaik.
(Friend has an xps 8900 and it was a unique experience)
I’d also find a cheap gpu to put in it. There is a mount for a 92 mm fan in the front. You just have to remove some tape in the front of the PC covering a vent.
Admittedly my friend games and does dev work on it.
Also it could do with a repaste.
As far as I know you can’t upgrade the CPU on that past the 6700.
I also love bunsenlabs and used it a lot. It’s so ridiculously light. I have it running on a pentium M laptop and it’s surprisingly usable. Don’t get me wrong it’s still a 20 year old device with one cpu core, but it can do most things.
Brb gonna go libreboot my sister’s t580 when that comes out
So that’s why everyone recommends the T480 over the T580.
The T580 doesn’t have a libreboot build.
I’ve been a fan of bunsenlabs distros. It uses debian and openbox and it’s very lightweight. I run it on a pentium M laptop and it’s quite usable. (I run it on other machines but that’s the slowest one I’ve got)
I think its a bit easier to use than kdenlive. I’d say it’s a little bit less full featured than kdenlive
That’s what bunsenlabs is for.
I got archcraft.
Lucky me. It’s also from India which is fun.
https://distrowatch.com/table-mobile.php?distribution=archcraft
Gobolinux?
No one mentioned Bunsenlabs or Crunchbang Linux here, but they aren’t really that obscure.
Unironically, Chrome OS Flex might be the way to go. Dead simple, uses A/B updates and is just that, for people who just need something to work.
The atom cpu in this has a powervr sgx545 gpu which is barely supported by anything. Ubuntu 12.04 has some support but it’s only 2d acceleration.
But the last release for it will be in December.
There is the fork mentioned in the forum post here.
https://forum.syncthing.net/t/discontinuing-syncthing-android/23002
https://github.com/Catfriend1/syncthing-android
I don’t use Syncthing and don’t have an Android phone so I can’t really speak for it in terms of functionality.
Id make it 2 or 3 gb. That being said, 1 gb is fine for such a light install. I have a similarly specced pentium M machine running modern debian with OpenBox. For heavier tasks, it was hitting swap (using a web browser). Upping it to 2 gb ram fixed that.
Edit: this also came with an ATI Mobility Radeon 9700 gpu which probably has a bit more support than the PowerVR gpu in the Atom.
There’s quite a few. I have bunsenlabs helium installed on a 32 bit pentium M laptop. It’s very usable, for a 20 yo single core machine. For basic things, it’s still fine. I do have some gpu acceleration though which is a benefit.
OpenBox but that’s a window manager, not a DE.
Can you try using a different os? Windows or something. I don’t see why it won’t work.