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Linux & Azure cloud engineer. Sometimes a wolf, or a fuzzy dragon.

Fully supported by Monado looks like.

lvra.gitlab.io/docs/hardware/

VR Gear & GPUs

Hardware# GPU Support# Manufacturer/ Hardware Driver VR Support Reprojection Support Hybrid Graphics Support Notes Nvidia >= 16XX Series GPU Nvidia (Open Module) ✅ Acceptable ⚠️ Partial ✅ Supported Requires driver version 565+. By default there will be noticeable display latency - see the Monado troubleshooting section. There is no fix on SteamVR. Nvidia <= 10XX Series GPU Nvidia (Closed Source Module) ✅ Acceptable ⚠️ Partial ✅ Supported Requires driver version 565+. No Valve Index support. Nvidia/ Any Nouveau (Open Source) ⚠️ Limited ❌ Not Viable ✅ Supported Cannot reproject due to lack of realtime compute shader support needed by Monado. Lacks DisplayPort audio. Not recommended for VR. AMD RDNA generation GPU RADV (Open Source) ✅ Excellent ✅ Robust (RDNA+) ✅ Supported Recommended for wired VR. AMD GCN generation GPU RADV (Open Source) ✅ Excellent ⚠️ Limited ✅ Supported Not recommended for wired VR. Pre-RDNA GPUs have functional but less robust reprojection. AMD/ Any AMDVLK / AMDGPU PRO ❌ Not Viable ❌ Not Viable ❌ N/A RADV preferred in all circumstances. Unable to drive wired HMDs. Do not use. Do not seek support. Intel/ Any i915 (Open Source) ⚡ Functional ✅ Robust (Limited testing) ✅ Supported Relatively old driver. SteamVR/ALVR doesn’t start. WiVRn tested working. Graphical glitches in some games. Intel/ Any Intel/Xe (Open Source) ❌ No wired HMDs ✅ Robust (Limited testing) ✅ Supported Lacks direct mode implementation in driver, unable to drive wired HMDs. WiVRn tested working. Graphical glitches in some games. Notes:

Linux VR Adventures Wiki

They’re pretty decent. Really depends on the temperature.

If the room is cool you hear the hard drives over the chassis fans.

I have a Dell R220 and a R240 which I’m looking to offload, free. They’re both specifically for short racks if you happen to be near central NC.

lvra.gitlab.io

Monado helped me kick windows for VR. With a quest you’d use WiVRn:

lvra.gitlab.io/docs/fossvr/wivrn/

I’d recommend using Envision to have a nice GUI: lvra.gitlab.io/docs/fossvr/envision/

Home

Welcome to the LVRA Wiki# This is a collection of links, useful resources and guides for the amazing world of VR on Linux. Feel free to contribute to this wiki yourself if you find anything useful that you might want to share with others. Your VR setup all depends on what hardware you have installed/available. Start by reading the hardware page. Keep these things in mind: Generally, for wireless/Android/standalone headsets, you’ll want to use WiVRn. Visit the WiVRn page for installation instructions. Generally, for wired headsets like Index/Vive/WMR/Oculus/Rift, you’ll want to use Envision to build and run the latest Monado. Monado or WiVRn are replacements for SteamVR. Once set up (and complemented with xrizer) you won’t need to launch SteamVR anymore. Install WiVRn directly if you can; it’s a lot easier than building it with Envision, which is only necessary if you need a custom branch (e.g. for SlimeVR support). Community# Join our community of thousands of Linux VR adventurers!

Linux VR Adventures Wiki

Yeah they call it a “carrier discount” but it’s really just a fee:

FYI if you don’t activate the phone immediately at the store (or online) they charge an extra $30 fee.

The regular iPhone and S25 are exactly the same price.

The S25 ultra is $100 MORE expensive than the iPhone 16 pro max.

samsung.com/…/galaxy-s25-ultra-256gb-unlocked-sku…

www.apple.com/shop/buy-iphone/iphone-16-pro

Buy Galaxy S25 Ultra 256GB | Titanium Black Smartphone | Price & Deals | Samsung US

Buy the Galaxy S25 Ultra. Save on trade-ins and shop the latest S Series smartphone at Samsung.

Samsung US
Little Show of Horrors
If you don’t need a hotkey for your mic this is the best solution by far.

You actually can’t anymore. Let it go my dude.

arstechnica.com/…/google-will-block-sideloading-o…

Google will block sideloading of unverified Android apps starting next year

Google says it's no different than checking IDs at the airport.

Ars Technica