Aww, yeah Iād like to think so too! ā„ļø But sheās afraid - or at least extremely hesitant - of spiders so I donāt know if sheād be worth much in terms of protection š
Well, you are both wrong..!
ā¦ we only made it until 00:30 (12:30AM) before she landed on me and woke me up š
Right, good to have that confirmed by others š
I am generally supportive of the āunderdogā, so at least for now I am choosing AMD parts (disclaimer: subject to change - or at least continuous reconsideration)
I like the eco option too! Zen CPUs are quite effective at slightly lower clocks than what gives the utmost of performance, which is neat when an energy crisis hits. Is that why you bought a 7950X, and then chose to make use of the eco option? So that you at a later point could turn up the performance (given an acceptable trade off with energy at that time)?
Iād also guess a lot of people like that somewhat obsessive but exciting feeling when researching new gear (be it hardware or otherwise)! Choosing the right stuff for you - with options and capabilities - is a fun exercise in optimisation. At least thatās how I think of it.
Yeah i get that about support and ability to update firmware; and itās actually what I was interested in learning when I asked with regards to the Intel/AMD debacle. But itās more regarding the other components in the setup that would affect the experience, right? Do you run a Linux distribution daily, or was it simply required that it should be able to someday?
I myself have used Ubuntu for years, and finally got my better half to let me install it (though it was Kubuntu for both of us at that time). It actually worked quite well, until we got to gaming Hogwarts Legacyā¦ that didnāt quite agree with our setups. On one (5600X+6950) it was sadly only fixed when I switched it to Windows. The other one was also switched to Windows (š) but it didnāt fix the problem - after a lot of tries and increasing frustration, I tried turning off SMT. And it workedā¦ entirely. That is a 1800X+6950.
Iād really like to go back to Kubuntu (or Neon), but it would have to be a sure solution as I have just started a job and the free time is limited now. I tried lots of debugging measures, including trying to increase the memory maps (I think - please correct me if Iām wrong) to rather large number, as others said it was defined to on the Steam Deck. Also I tried SAM both on/off without luck. So, Windows it is for now, but I lurk in these sections on any input for gaming on Linux, hoping š
Is there anything that makes AMD CPUās the preferred choice over Intel CPUās, when running Linux? I was of the understanding that compatibility was quite smoothed out at this point at the CPU/motherboard level and that there wouldnāt be any particular preference in that respect.
I myself have had both Intel CPUās back in the Sandy Bridge days and then AMD CPUās since Zen - both worked equally well for Linux in my experience.