I don’t think any of my devices are using more than 2x2 either, that is just the maximum of the access points.
The speeds I get are on a Fairphone 5 with 2x2, at most a room with drywalls away.
I don’t think any of my devices are using more than 2x2 either, that is just the maximum of the access points.
The speeds I get are on a Fairphone 5 with 2x2, at most a room with drywalls away.
I get 700/500 on my Unifi U6 Enterprise (4x4 MIMO, 80 MHz, 5 GHz) and 500/500 on my Unifi AC Pro (3x3 MIMO, 80 MHz, 5 GHz).
Could probably get some more on 6 GHz but I never was able to get it to work properly.
Does it lock up when booting? Fedora’s kernel has issues booting on Surface devices since Fedora 39.
You either need to switch kernels (e.g. linux-surface kernel) on a different machine or switch distro.
Running an outdated Fedora version is not the solution.
That only applies to the GNOME variant, the KDE spin is missing the third party repo toggle.
At least the Flathub repo is fixed on the GNOME variant now. The Nvidia repo is added but the driver is not installed, meaning you still need to use the CLI to install the drivers.
No, it’s like buying a car without understanding how the engine works, which a lot of people do.
It caters to a middle ground that barely exists, meaning it doesn’t have enough options for a power user and too many for a newcomer.
For example, a newcomer doesn’t know what a root account is and doesn’t have to care, yet they have to choose if they want to enable or disable the account. They can also remove their administrator privileges without knowing what it means for them. I get asked what a root account is every time somebody around me tries to install Fedora.
I recommend spinning up a Ubuntu 24.04 VM and taking a look at their installer.
They have a clear structure on how to install Ubuntu step by step while Fedora presents you everything at once. They properly hide the advanced stuff and only show it when asked for it. They have clear toggles for third party software right at the installer and explain what they do. Fedora doesn’t even give you the option to install H264 codecs or Nvidia drivers.
It also looks a lot cleaner and doesn’t overload people with too much info on a single screen. And yet it can still do stuff like automated installing and has active directory integration out of the box, where the Fedora installer miserably fails for a “Workstation” distro.
The Fedora installer works, but it doesn’t do much more than that and the others do it better in many areas.
Long-time Fedora user here. I do not think Fedora is noob friendly at all.
I really like Fedora for their newish packages without breaking constantly. I still would not recommend it for beginners.
Shoutout to Frictional Games (known for Penumbra, Amnesia, Soma) who publish many of their older (commercially successfully) games on their GitHub: https://github.com/FrictionalGames
Off the top of my head, why did you set the prefix to 0x1? I was under the impression that it only needs to be set if there are multiple vlans
I have multiple VLANs, 0x1 is my LAN and 0x10 is my DMZ for example. I then get IP addresses abcd:abcd:a01::abcd in my LAN and abcd:abcd:a10::bcdf in my DMZ.
However, I get a /56 from my ISP wich gets subnetted into /64. I heard it’s not ideal to subnet a /64 but you might want to double check what you really got.
what are your rules for the WAN side of the firewall?
Only IPv4 + IPv6 ICMP, the normal NAT rules for IPv4 and the same rules for IPv6 but as regular rule instead of NAT rule.
My LAN interface is only getting an LLA so maybe it’s being blocked from communicating with the ISP router.
If you enable DHCPv6 in your network your firewall should be the one to hand out IP addresses, your ISP assigns your OPNsense the prefix and your OPNsense then subnets them into smaller chunks for your internal networks.
It is possible to do it without DHCPv6 but I didn’t read into it yet since DHCPv6 does exactly what I want it to do.
I’m no expert on IPv6 but here’s how I did it on my OPNsense box:
WAN
interface (probably already done)LAN
interface, use Track interface
on IPv6, track the WAN
interface and choose a prefix ID like 0x1
::eeee
to ::ffff
, you don’t have to type the full IP)Advertisments
to Managed
and Priority
to High
After that your DHCP server should serve public IPv6 addresses inside of your prefix and clients should be able to connect to the internet.
A few notes:
Right you are, but don’t start telling everyone so I can’t silently download my lossless albums from Tidal, Deezer and Qobuz anymore.
I use ROCm for inference, both text generation via llama.cpp/LMStudio and image generation via ComfyUI.
Works pretty much perfectly on a 6900 XT. Very fast and easy to setup.
I had issues with some libraries only supporting CUDA when trying to train, but that was almost 6 months ago so things probably have improved in that area as well.
I have been using this for a few hours now and it’s pretty great, so far my favorite of all the players I tried. Left the dev a few bucks on GitHub.
I don’t run Pi-hole but quickly peeking into the container (docker run -it --rm --entrypoint /bin/sh pihole/pihole:latest
) the folder and files belong to root with the permissions being 755
for the folder and 644
for the files.
chmod 700
most likely killed Pi-hole because a service that is not running as root will be accessing those config files and you removed their read access.
Also, I’m with the guys above. Never chmod 777
anything, period. In 99.9% of cases there’s a better way.
Just finished the DLC now and for 12 bucks I think the DLCs are excellent. Not worth 40 bucks but definitely worth it on sale.
The double marauder encounters were incredibly annoying and some platform/puzzle segments were pretty unclear on where you need to go. Having to add lengthy cutscenes so people know where to go sort of should tell them that the level design is not up to spec. But overall very enjoyable, thanks for the recommendation!
MakeMKV: For ripping DVDs & Blurays
MakeMKV is available on Linux as Flatpak and works out of the box: https://flathub.org/apps/com.makemkv.MakeMKV
Bulk Rename Utility
Probably a tough one since most people will use the command line to bulk rename files. I do use ChatGPT sometimes to create rename commands for me that are more complicated.
Exact Audio Copy
I use Sound Juicer now, used fre:ac before.
https://flathub.org/apps/org.gnome.SoundJuicer
https://flathub.org/apps/org.freac.freac
Logitech G Hub I know OpenRGB exists, and it’s good enough for my needs when it comes to LED management, but it doesn’t seem to be able to control DPI presets like G Hub.
Piper can do DPI presets: https://flathub.org/apps/org.freedesktop.Piper
Mp3tag
I used Mp3tag on Windows and switched to Picard, I like it even more than Mp3tag now: https://flathub.org/apps/org.musicbrainz.Picard
Is GIMP really that complex for this use case? I use GIMP to do simple stuff like paint, rescale images, blur things, fill things, … https://flathub.org/apps/org.gimp.GIMP
Playnite
I don’t use anything out of Steam often but If you don’t like Lutris, maybe Heroic for GOG and Epic? https://flathub.org/apps/com.heroicgameslauncher.hgl
Mod Organizer 2
r2modman has native support for Linux: https://github.com/ebkr/r2modmanPlus
There’s also support for one-click installation of Mod Organizer 2 with steamtinkerlaunch: https://github.com/sonic2kk/steamtinkerlaunch/wiki/Mod-Organizer-2
I played TotK start to end on yuzu on release in 4k with ultrawide and 60 fps mod, little to no issues.
BotW is also very playable now on yuzu, development sped up drastically when TotK released.
Well thanks for the heads up, as a fellow lazy Gandi user I now know where to switch my domains to.
I got a Unifi US 16 XG as core switch for like 400 bucks back when it was new and thought it was expensive.
Looking at what Unifi is doing nowadays a 16 port 10 Gbit switch seems like a steal.
Besides that I also have a US 16 150W for my PoE devices and a USW 24 G1 for everything else.
Also, abusing a Github issue as your personal Twitter timeline is not going to persuade anyone.
The comments in that issue are atrocious.