• 0 Posts
  • 21 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: August 16th, 2024

help-circle


  • Just sharing my personal experience with this:

    I used Gemini multiple times and it worked great. I have some weird symptoms that I described to Gemini, and it came up with a few possibilities, most likely being “Superior Canal Dehiscence Syndrome”.

    My doctor had never heard of it, and only through showing them the articles Gemini linked as sources, would my doctor even consider allowing a CT scan.

    Turns out Gemini was right.


  • Ventrilo was awful, having huge delay. Also no persistent chat.

    TeamSpeak is proprietary and required a license for more than 8 users iirc. Chat might have been persistent?

    Mumble was/is king in terms of voice chat. Open source, fully featured, strong certificate based security, best latency. It’s used as backend in many big games, too. No persistent chat, though.

    We used IRC for chat and Mumble for voice like 10 years ago when I played Eve Online. Works great!













  • There’s no graphical installer officially, no. There are many Arch derivatives with installers though, like CachyOS.

    Installing Arch is literally running like 10 commands, and it’s all very well documented.

    1. Put your Archiso USB stick in and reboot
    2. Format your disks if needed, mkfs
    3. Mount root and boot partitions
    4. Run pacstrap to install base system
    5. Generate fstab
    6. In chroot, set time and locale(s), set password, install bootloader
    7. Choose/install a network manager, like systemd-networkd
    8. Reboot

    Now you’re running Arch. Make a user and install a DE, optionally.





  • It’s super easy to start a VM to try.

    Just install qemu (and optionally enable KVM), then to run eg. Ubuntu installer:

    qemu-system-x86_64 \
      -enable-kvm \
      -m 2G \
      -cpu host \
      -smp 2 \
      -cdrom /path/to/ubuntu-24.04-desktop-amd64.iso \
      -hda ubuntu-disk.qcow2 \
      -boot d \
      -vga virtio \
      -display gtk
    

    After you install it, run the VM:

    qemu-system-x86_64 \
      -enable-kvm \
      -m 2G \
      -cpu host \
      -smp 2 \
      -hda ubuntu-disk.qcow2 \
      -boot c \
      -vga virtio \
      -display gtk
    

    Or use libvirt, like a layer on top to make things much simpler. I use virt-manager for GUI and virsh on command line.