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Logi pedals upgrade + Linux

https://lemmy.world/post/41400717

Logi pedals upgrade + Linux - Lemmy.World

I’m looking for some advice, it’s been a few years since I was into sim racing (AC, PC2, iracing), now I’m looking to get back into sims - mostly offline at first. I have an older Logi G27 wheel & pedals and have recently moved to Linux (Bazzite). From what I understand, these should work in Linux, however I’m interested in upgrades to make things better. The G27 is fine, wheel is ok and does the job for now (vs my skill level) but the brake pedal is my biggest issue in being consistent. It’s been a while since I’ve been up to play on hardware, is it worth finding a loadcell brake/mod for the G27 considering the age of this kit, or is it better to replace the entire pedal set with something newer?

Return of the Dumb-arse!

https://lemmy.world/post/33948981

Return of the Dumb-arse! - Lemmy.World

As requested, – here is an update on my Linux adventure - the first week has gone by without incident and I’m not turning back! The tl:dr summary: OMFG. This is probably the EASIEST OS install I’ve ever had – and that’s saying something - since most modern Linux distros are easy! Reminder of who you’re reading right now – I’m a Windows veteran for the past 25 years and between work and home, I’ve used and supported every flavour from Win95 to Win11 and Server 03 to Server 22. I have installed well-north of 1000 instances in my time, deployed from Floppy, CD, USB, Ghost, WDS and more. I have dabbled in Linux on-and-off over the years but always on secondary PCs so this is my first time rocking Linux on my primary. I’ve spent the last 12 months experimenting with Linux in preparation for the End-of-10 and this very moment. Testing different distros, Desktop Environments and philosophies while digging into proper Linux learning (not just ‘best Distro’ lists or reviews on YouTube). I’ve had several ‘lightbulb’ moments as I’ve come to learn more about Linux that make me feel like a n00b all over again and I’m loving it. You can read my other lightbulb moment in here. The remainder of my home gear is already Window-free. Home server: (Unraid), laptop and TV box (Fedora Gnome & KDE respectively). These have all been cut over and running well for the past 6-months as I’ve really sunk my teeth into this new learning. Now that my last hurdle - Windows-only software requirement - is no holding me to Windows, I’m free at last! Current state: Brand-new parts purchased - and since I couldn’t wait, it’s all hosted in a temporary case while I wait for stock of the exact case I want. Core7 Ultra, B860 and 5060ti for those that care. Summary: This must be the easiest Linux distro I’ve ever used. Here is a breakdown of what happened: * Installed Bazzite * Log into the desktop * Sign into Steam * Download Doom 2016 * Play Doom 2016 in glorious ultra widescreen. It really was that easy. No Drivers to install, no endless Windows updates, no mountains of software to install and configuration to remove all the garbage and regain privacy. Once I got eaten by a Pinky then I quit the game to continue my setup, just a handful of flat pack software installs required to fill the gaps but all that was done in about 20mins. In fact, downloading Doom took longer than the rest of it combined! And fast! The new hardware helps obviously but I’ve forgotten how bloated office has become. Libre Office by comparison opens in half a second and everything feels so snappy. Nothing is snappy on Win11, not even notepad anymore. I watched a very timely video on the weekend featuring a guy with fancy chest-hair [https://youtu.be/rFuIQb4QccQ] and this really hit me where I lived (and worked). So many of Window’s ‘quirks’ are normalised while the same (or less) on Linux is seen as a problem. To paraphrase: we think nothing of editing registry, running PowerShell scripts or sacrificing small woodland creatures to remove built-in functions and apps, and endless other utilities to give us control over our system and yet, if we do anything like this in Linux, it’s “too hardcore, not ready for mainstream”. I haven’t touched the terminal at all, yet I have to the software I need and my entire PC is ready to use. If you’re someone who’s been on the fence about Linux, please don’t be. If you last tried it 5+ years ago, I encourage you to revisit. I honestly think Linux is about ready for the mainstream and I genuinely didn’t think Bazzite would be this easy getting games going. A huge thank you to the Bazzite team and everyone who contribute to making Linux better and easier!!

Dumb-arse inside - Lemmy.World

This is a story all about how… one sad old sack finally “got” Linux distros. I’ve been a very casual Linux user over 20-odd years, mostly on secondary PCs and generally sticking with noob-friendly distros, but only in the last few months I’ve become serious and started to learn the how and why of Linux. Like many others, this year is my own personal year of Linux on the desktop. My server, media box and laptops are all now running Fedora, only my primary PC remains left behind on Win10 because of critical software keeping me tied to Windows - but from next week that is no longer needed and the shackles are off! I’ve sampled several different Distros this year to find the perfect fit for this very moment, but this search reminded me how the sheer number of distros annoyed me. I’ve always seen the vast number of Distros as wasteful. Effort that could be put into pushing Linux forward rather than creating another fork sideways. I’m not sure now what I thought a distro actually was but I’ve now come to realise the genius of this (not to say there isn’t any replication and waste between Distros). I had settled on KDE Fedora as my distro of choice some time ago. Then, when I found the idea of an immutable distro, this appealed (to help prevent my dumb-arse breaking things), so I pivoted to Kinoite to give me exactly what I wanted. All I needed was to work out how to get Steam running. Many of you can probably already see where this is going. In a moment of Picard-level face-palming, I started exploring Bazzite thinking this would give me an idea of what’s required. The distro itself looked good and when I went digging deeper, I found an Immutable, Fedora base in either KDE or Gnome. Bazzite is basically Atomic Fedora, pre-configured for gaming! Face-smack. Maybe I thought Bazzite was based on Arch which is why I hadn’t looked at it before, but now I better understood the genius of Linux distros. The Bazzite team could take the core of what they want, then tweak it for a specific use-case and release it, thinking others might like it too. They’re not reinventing the wheel as I first believed, they were building upon previous work. One of the greatest strengths of open source. I probably already knew this but somehow, I hadn’t quite put the pieces together in one place. TL;DR: I’m a numpty Tune in tomorrow when I argue that no one should recommend Arch to anyone - and why that’s a good thing…

I don’t think we’re unique in the world, this impacts most countries but I believe the average kiwi doesn’t realize how bad it is and so thinks NZ is still a fair-go country.

Caused by dozens of issues over the past 50+ years:

  • No1 on my list would be the demonization of unions (deserved in some cases, probably not in most), leading to reduced membership and weakened labour bargaining power
  • Gradually shifting tax burden from those who could afford it (thus redistributing some of that wealth into public assets) and onto the lower-earning masses who can’t. By way of policy, tax rates, financial structure (trusts etc)
  • Ongoing pro-business policy on the right with compromise worker/business friendly policy on the left
  • Requiring business to prioritise profits for owners/investors, without employees having equal footing in this consideration.
  • Anti competitive/duopoly businesses in almost every major sector
  • All of the above leading to wage suppression
  • Nepotism and racism leading to those who go to private schools more likely to land lucrative roles
  • Privatisation of national assets. Sold to only those that can afford to invest (amplifying inequality) then once there is a profit incentive, only increases the costs for consumers.
  • Govt getting lumped with cleaning up the carcass after private business has bled an asset dry to retain it for the national benefits or to avoid environmental damage (Kiwi Rail, Marsden point)
  • Demonization of welfare meaning anyone hitting bottom just gets pushed further into the dirt
  • Demonization of any attempts at wealth distribution. CGT increasing the top brackets, UBI etc.
  • Low productivity. Shitty businesses run by owners/managers who can’t see past the end of their nose.
  • Productivity improvements fought by the labour force because productively gains aren’t shared (less jobs)
  • NIMBYism
  • Short term thinking by both Govt and voters. Often caused by immediate need as more and more people become desperate and in hardship.

Probably many, many more but in summing up, it’s capitalism, it’s nepotism and racism - it’s the vibe.

Inequality: NZ Edition

https://lemmy.world/post/25004333

Inequality: NZ Edition - Lemmy.World

After seeing something similar elsewhere I decided to give this a go. Honestly, I thought the top 1% (population the size of Hastings) might reach down to Whangarei or at most upper-upper Auckland, but it’s the visual representation of the top 10% - basically everything north of about Kaikoura - that shocked me the most!

With the orange splooge talking of pardoning insurrectionists...

https://lemmy.world/post/22929867

With the orange splooge talking of pardoning insurrectionists... - Lemmy.World

[https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/d43a1468-1abb-4d32-893f-a1ec310daa0d.jpeg]

There is still time...

https://lemmy.world/post/22854512

There is still time... - Lemmy.World

… to make this the most played song of the year!