*sigh*
so i need to re-install windows. and some of my software has updates I need to pay for, that I dont have the money for
like Ableton Live, which I use for music production
and it costs USD 229 (plus tax at 8.937% [I hate my locality])
EDIT:
ARGHHH all my mixed in key software update too
496 + tax
I dont have any money whatsoever, and I am about to beg for help on food and basic staples
I want to cry.
damnit Micro$haft err Microsoft, why did you force 24H2 on me without my consent!!!
this is software I use on a DAILY basis.
Die neueste Windows-11-Version macht seit ihrer Veröffentlichung allerhand Schwierigkeiten. Microsoft arbeitet an mehreren kritischen Problemen gleichzeitig. Jetzt ist zumindest eines davon behoben und das Update steht den betroffenen Nutzern ab sofort zur Verfügung.
I played around with VB Matrix today, and that is cooool!
It's an audio routing tool by the same person that built #VoiceMeeter that lets you route your PCs audio from all kinds of sources, to all kinds of destinations. Kinda like the routing feature of a GoXLR, but turned up to 11.
It registers itself as up to 8 virtual sound devices that can each accept audio of one or more apps (you could send your music to one of them, a game's sound to another and voice chat audio to a third), lets you access all the audio devices you already have installed (like a connected microphone), and through the "VBAN" protocol by the same dev you can even add other devices to the mix - phones, other PCs, whatever you want.
And that #VBAN protocol also has a control channel to remote-control the whole app, e.g. from a Streamdeck, or possibly #HomeAssistant? I haven't looked into HA in particularily, but there's a couple of VBAN libraries, and AFAIK it's just messages sent over UDP :D
@BrodieOnLinux PipeWire routing is godlike. For years I used to have a super convoluted #JACK + #VoiceMeeter Potato setup to handle all my stupid routing on Windows (for music production).
It was very much a botched together solution from pieces that weren't really designed to do what I was trying to do and just barely sorta worked.
Then #PipeWire and #yabridge happened and ever since I tried it, I haven't looked back (not just at Windows, but also at PulseAudio).
Speaking of the #gaming landscape on #Linux, I think performance-wise it's certainly been comparable between Linux and #Windows. I definitely have not noticed any difference between the two, not to say there isn't any. Compatibility wise, most games should work out of the box on #Steam, especially if the game does not use any anti cheat software that specifically prohibits from working on Linux. Pretty much all games I'm interested in playing don't have this issue. The **ONLY** difference I notice between when I was still on Windows, and now that I've primarily and exclusively been using Linux for over a year for all things including gaming, is the streaming/recording experience while gaming. I've always used an #NVIDIA GPU since it's always offered not just the most performant but more importantly to me, the most efficient graphics card. One nice thing about NVIDIA cards is the NVENC encoder, which from what I've been keeping tabs on, #AMD's implementation/equivalent to it has still not matched/surpassed NVENC. Back when NVENC 1.0 came out, my gaming experience (when I was still on Windows) changed entirely as it allowed me to game **AND** stream/record my gameplay on the same PC with barely any performance cost. When they upgraded to NVENC 2.0, that performance cost continues to go down drastically, and I have never gamed without recording or streaming my gameplay to my partner/friends via #Discord. On Linux, for one, Discord does not yet natively support streaming an application **with** audio (which renders it pointless). I work around this by using a custom Discord client instead, Discord-screenaudio which is available as a #Flatpak. For recording purposes, I still use #OBS. So, the only difference so far in gaming on Windows and on Linux, is that on Linux, I absolutely cannot game while also recording or streaming on the same PC. It's fine if I delegate the recording/streaming to another PC via a capture card, but I don't do that as that'd be too costly. There's NVENC support too on OBS on Linux, but for whatever reason, while recording and gaming simultaneously on the same device on Windows gave me pretty much no performance hit, it butchers my performance significantly if I do the same on Linux. I feel like this is one of the few things that could be improved, gaming-wise on Linux. If you're not a data hoarder and you live life _dangerously_ without the need to document/record absolutely everything you do including gaming, you're fine gaming on either platform lol. On Linux, at least on NVIDIA GPU, you will certainly need a secondary PC to do your streaming/recording while you're gaming.
I recently changed my main display to Samsung Odyssey G9 (G93SC). I got it with a decent price, 1080€ from black Friday sale. It's an awesome display for both gaming and productivity. The G9 runs at 240FPS through AMD7900XTX. The actual FPS in-game is often around 150FPS.
The display is huge and i can zoom everything to 125% for aging eyes while keeping the display far enough, so i don't need bifocal lenses.
This concluded renewing the main desktop system. Hopefully i can run this setup for next ten years. The old one survived nine years. I kept old displays but moved them to the internal GPU in CPU and run at 60FPS. Physically i replaced their original stands with a double-VESA stand, and now they hang over the Samsung, showing #Teams, #Discord, #VoiceMeeter, #Tidal etc. windows i keep open all day.
Turning HDR on brought an annoying Windows bug. Screenshots taken in HDR mode are way too bright, clipping the brightest parts.
#HomeIT #SamsungG9 #OldAge #WindowsBug #screenshots
So a thing I just learned, for streamers who use #Voicemeeter for its virtual audio cables.
You don't actually have to upgrade to its full-size "potato" version just to get a third cable, and be stuck with 5 hardware inputs you'll never use. You can stick with banana and use their separate VB-Cable driver to add basic virtual audio cables, and then hook those up to the Voicemeeter hardware inputs, and it works just the same.
Also since they offer drivers to give you up to 5 of these basic cables, if you do upgrade to Potato, you can have up to 8 virtual audio cables!