If you’ll be using it in a shop, as a tool and that Debian works well. Well… stick with Debian !
If you’ll be using it in a shop, as a tool and that Debian works well. Well… stick with Debian !
The POSIFLEX issue might have to do with MBR. On your final linux installation, your partition table should NOT be using gpt but mbr and that might solve the issues.
It has to do with older BIOS not recognising gpt and henceforth being unable to boot from the disk.
N.B. you might have to configure your GRUB/systemd loader accordingly.
For ~100€, through a Raspberry Pi, you can stream 4K60p to your TV. From there, you are the sole master of the seas, Captain.
I had the same problem with a MSI GF65.
I had an Intel AX201, which is basically the same device as the intel killer wifi card on the GS65.
I battled with the issue for a very long time. It came from Windows and only from Windows. You have to disable fastboot and there is a way to shut it down “fully” which you have to do.
If that does not solve it your only way out of it is to reinstall Windows.
You have everything quality wise on TGx
It might be because I’m using Arch and everything has to be done manually 🤷
Good for you if you have it figured out ! Welcome to Linux !
Because it’s not about installing them, it’s making them work that’s not intuitive. I have an nvidia card and some linux experience, it was hard for me to set it up. If you have no background on linux, making it work might make you abandon it. In those cases it’s better to go with something that has everything figured out for you.
Why not, though ?
If you want up to date go with Arch/Nix, don’t go OpenSuSE.
sudo apt install qbittorrent