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Haha yess. I was initially planning on 7900 XTX which was pushing the wattage around 550. So I thought maybe in future if I upgrade to something even beefier, I don’t want to buy another PSU that’s why I stuck to 850W.

I see, that makes a bit more sense then. I think it’s fine to put an 850W PSU in this build, given that you’re not paying much more than for a 650 to 750W PSU. I was just a bit surprised to see an 850W PSU in a build that will probably draw around 400W to 450W under load.

The part list looks good to me. I think you were a bit generous with the PSU wattage, but I don’t think you can save a lot there anyway. If you play a lot of competitive (high-FPS) games, you could also consider spending a bit more on the CPU (e.g. 9800X3D) instead of the GPU.

The BIOS update should be fine as you already have another computer and the mainboard supports BIOS flashback. One note from my experience is that I needed to use the Windows version of 7zip (through Wine) to extract the BIOS on similar MSI B650 board. Otherwise, the BIOS update would fail.

I think that massive tower cooler should easily handle your 65W CPU (even in your hot climate). An air cooler also has the additional benefit of an air current over nearby components (RAM, VRM, …). IMHO, liquid cooling is mostly something that people do because it’s nice (and quiet). But, it’s always higher maintenance than simple air cooling.

It’s just so phenomenally little it doesn’t make any sense, a full routine wouldn’t even full charge a smartphone battery (not even close). Put solar on the studio roof instead.

I think you’re wrong on that one. E.g. when cycling, 100W for 15 minutes is achievable for most people, which corresponds to 25 Wh of energy. To charge a modern phone you need about 15 Wh. So if your overall system efficiency is at least 60%, which seems realistic, you’d be able to charge a phone with that.

I guess it’s just not financially viable. Because those 25 Wh would still correspond to less than 1 cent in value (at 0.3€/kWh).

The saves should be in your old Wine prefix. If you didn’t delete that, you should be able to copy them to the new prefix.

I think the problem is that the license grant (that has been in place for a decade) is not that clear.

You are licensed to use compiled versions of the Mattermost platform produced by Mattermost, Inc. under an MIT LICENSE

  • See MIT-COMPILED-LICENSE.md included in compiled versions for details

You may be licensed to use source code to create compiled versions not produced by Mattermost, Inc. in one of two ways:

  • Under the Free Software Foundation’s GNU AGPL v3.0, subject to the exceptions outlined in this policy; or […]
  • I read it as releasing the binaries under MIT and granting people an AGPL license for the (non-enterprise) code. Some read it as not granting you the full AGPL rights.

    To me, the fact that they advertise Mattermost as “open-source” and the statement on the “reciprocal license” above indicates that Mattermost also reads this as an AGPL license grant. However, they don’t seem to be interested in fully clarifying the license situation. But, I think they would have a very hard time to argue in court that this license doesn’t allow AGPL forks. And I haven’t seen any evidence of them acting against any of the existing forks.

    Eh, that post title is quite sensationalistic.

  • Nothing regarding the license has changed in the last 2 years.
  • It seems like they consider the non-enterprise code to be licensed under the AGPL:
  • Thank you for the community discussion around this topic. I do recognize that our licensing strategy doesn’t offer the clarity the community would like to see, but at this time we are not entertaining any changes as such.

    UPDATE Feb 2, 2026: To be specific, our license is using standard open source licenses, a reciprocal AGPL license and a permissive Apache v2 license for other areas. Both are widely used open source licenses and have multiple interpretations of how they apply, as showcased in this thread.

    When we say we don’t “offer the clarity the community would like to see”, that refers specifically to the many statements in this thread where different contributors are confused by other people’s comments and statements.

    For LICENCE.txt itself, anyone can read the history file and see we haven’t materially changed it since the start of the project.

    If you’re modifying the core source code under the reciprocal license you share those changes back to the open source community. If you’d like to modify the open source code base without sharing back to the community, you can request a commercial license for the code under commercial terms.

    Maybe we can hold the pitchforks a while longer, unless they actually make a negative change.

    He certainly claims to have used the correct Bazzite images:

    A few folks have asked but yes every machine got it’s own specific install, each machine has it’s own Bazzite ISO download for their specific hardware. No cloning, no short cuts, each was treated like a brand new machine with a fresh install 🕊️. After updates installed I rebooted and checked updates again, I’ll never take PC benchmarks for granted again 😅

    He also mentions that he used the “Nvidia (GTX 9xx-10xx Series)” image for the 1080 Ti system.

    Of course, it could be that he messed up, but it could also be that Bazzite didn’t work as intended. It certainly wouldn’t be the first time that Nvidia drivers broke on a Linux distro.

    If that was the intent, then I think this was a very bad way to show that. A much better way would’ve been showing that it didn’t work on system X and resolving it (e.g. with some external help). Instead he just showed a large number of invalid/irrelevant benchmarks. This now leaves people thinking that Linux has a massive performance deficit instead of an issue with the driver installation. I would like to see a follow-up to address the driver issues and explain what went wrong, s.t. we can actually learn something from this.

    I would also hope that the typical experience is that it works out of the box, especially on a distro like Bazzite, but that’s besides the point.

    Yes, they could even show a list of detected GPUs, the driver used, and some status indication (e.g. warning if NVK is used).

    One of the main selling points of Bazzite is that it works out of the box. They even advertise this on their website:

    Bazzite focuses on hardware compatibility out of the box, with full support for accelerated video encoding and decoding, built in Nvidia drivers, additional HID drivers, and just about every udev rule you could need.

    On Bazzite, one should not need to look up how to install drivers.