• typhoon@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I wonder how feasible would be to calibrate Secureblue with the gaming changes that were introduced in the Bazzite desktop flavor.

    Would it be similar to try to change Bluefin and Aurora or it requires additional work?

    I mean, for me makes more sense to start with the secure option and add the gaming tinkering to it.

    • Grass@sh.itjust.works
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      3 hours ago

      I have one computer where I used aurora instead (same thing but not gaming focused), because bazzite would for some reason end up with repeated kde crashes no matter what. every other computer including my grandmas’s is bazzite now. If it works you can expect it to stay that way.

      Between flatpaks, appimage, brew, distrobox, and rpm via rmp-ostree, I haven’t found anything I need that can’t be installed. time can still tell though

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 hours ago

      I’ve been using Bazzite on my laptop that I use for gaming and it’s great. It comes pre-packaged (some pre-installed, others can be done any time with simple “ujust” console commands) with a ton of things made specifically for gaming. You’d probably be better off finding a list on their site than me trying to list them here. But I’ve found it to be much better for gaming (and more stable) than Arch.

      It is my first experience with an immutable distro, and it took a little getting used to, but I’ve come to really like it. OStree is really cool and it’s crazy how simple it is to rollback to previous “images” (snapshot basically) or even “rebase” to a different immutable distro (haven’t tried this yet, but it’s literally just one command then reboot).

      If you get really deep into it, you can even create your own custom OS image and it’s completely transferrable.

      You are not limited to flatpaks at all, and it comes with distrobox which is incredibly useful for installing packages in a box without needing root write permission. Bazzite is based on Fedora, so you can install a package in a “Fedora toolbox” (that is an image of Fedora made specifically for distrobox), and then create a shortcut to run that program from your host without having to open distrobox again.

      I made an Arch box and installed yay to have access to AUR.

      It’s very stable, and hard to break. But still very tinker-able.

      • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 hour ago

        Bazzite is based on Fedora, so you can install a package in a “Fedora toolbox” (that is an image of Fedora made specifically for distrobox)

        Does this work for stuff that’s looking for deeper kernelish level access? I gave up on bazzite because I couldn’t figure out how to get some system monitoring program to work