Windows 10 not appears after clean installation

I appreciate XFCE default edition, but plasma has improved a lot during last years and in Endeavour I saw that DE take less memory and general resources comparated to other distro’s (even I admire Opensuse Plasma optimization - never tried KDE Neon)

Yes i also like Open Suse Tumbleweed Plasma because it’s rolling release. Kde Neon is good too but they are using older kernel. I like rolling releases better.

Why do you prefer rolling releases? Endeavour is my first rolling distro and I am afraid system broken ('cause i’m a noob, I admit :slight_smile: i’m learning. And 'cause i don’t feel like early adopter ) but i notice a lot of people prefer rolling.

For me it is mostly because I game a lot and don’t like waiting for updated packages that may help a certain game run natively on linux. Most importantly it is way easier to update a handful of packages once every couple of days and figure out which one may have cause a problem then waiting a month or two and getting 1.5gib of updates and trying to figure out where in that giant update a problem was pulled in.

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Most importantly it is way easier to update a handful of packages once every couple of days and figure out which one may have cause a problem then waiting a month or two and getting 1.5gib of updates and trying to figure out where in that giant update a problem was pulled in.

Good point: i never think about it!

Do you have an AMD or nvidia graphic card? Which type of titles you play?
I’m dual booting principally for League of Legends and for some 5 games from GOG (and I’m waiting for Cyberpunk 2077).
I wish delete my Windows system but i feel like I can’t, at the moment :frowning:

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Even when i used Linux Mint i used to install the latest kernels. I’m just not an lts kernel user. I prefer the most updated software as i am using newer hardware also. I like the idea of constant updates to all files and or packages. Updating at the binary level is interesting to me also as it only updates the part of the files that have changed rather than replacing everything. This means faster updating with less download size. On the contrary Windows just throws everything into a big pile and mixes it all together and hopes that it installs. Culmulative updates don’t make sense to me.

Clear Linux by Intel supposedly uses this method or something similar to only update files that have changed, rather than entire packages.

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Mostly steam games. I have a pretty big library (~1.5GIB). Latest proton releases and glorious eggroll releases are making more and more windows titles playable. Lately I have been playing death stranding, red dead redemption 2, and final fantasy XV.

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Even red dead redemption 2! Wow!!!
I don’t know if it’s your genre, but did you try Total War serie on Linux?

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For now, I’m really happy of my new software setup. I have a poor connection and it’s a really nice thing i can update the part of the files that have changed. I don’t know because i always feel afraid of arch… i feel like an idiot i installed it just nowadays :confused:

Check this db
https://www.protondb.com/search?q=Total%20War

Should be more than playable, there are even native Linux versions

Thank you! I already checked it, but I’d like to know how cpu works under stress on Linux :smiley:

There’s only one way to find out :upside_down_face:

It can run stuff like Crysis and GTA V at least Windows like, or in my case faster (i assume it also depends on CPU and hardware), but those 2 games are very CPU intensive

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