Try using rusticl for your OpenCL implementation. It runs OpenCL on top of Vulkan, which is very well supported by Radeon cards.
Try using rusticl for your OpenCL implementation. It runs OpenCL on top of Vulkan, which is very well supported by Radeon cards.
All good, just made me double take lol
Bon Jovi is alive, though?
Chromebooks use a customized Linux kernel with often proprietary code included from the manufacturer. Same thing as Android in that sense.
Upstream Linux, using mostly open-source code, does not have these bits of proprietary code in most cases. This means that ARM devices are frequently missing some drivers under mainline Linux, so things like TouchPad, wifi, or even GPU might be partially or fully unsupported.
Armbian Linux supports a large number of devices using mainline Linux with some tweaks to it pre-configured, but typically you’re not going to get every feature of the hardware supported until several years after its release (like 5+).
x86 on the other hand usually will just work out of the box, especially Lenovo laptops.
You probably want EndlessOS
Agreed, LXQT is the shit if you want a slow machine to go faster and look decent while doing it.
Yeah, I’m team @[email protected] on this one. It’s important but it’s not revolutionary
Mint with XFCE or MATE
This isn’t mystery, they’re saying any old command that prints out or copies a file’s contents will do.
If you need to use a tool that “just works” without growing your own understanding, there’s plenty of GUI-centric bootable USB writers out there.
It’s not getting abandoned, it’s just having some major components redone.
Ubuntu Studio 8.04, I believe. I was a broke high schooler looking for free recording software.
Ehhh, kinda. Intel E-cores kinda throw off the balance a bit, but generally yeah.