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www.simonmweber.com
| | nathanchance.dev
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| | Recently, I built a computer for school that I installed Windows 10 Pro on (link to the current specs if you are curious). I was a little bummed about leaving Chrome OS because I was going to lose my local Linux development environment; however, Windows Subsystem for Linux is a thing and it has gotten even better with WSL 2, as it is actually running a Linux kernel so there is full Linux compatibility going forward.
| | nkantar.com
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| | I tried migrating to a Chromebook and didn't like it.
| | www.webupd8.org
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| | Things To Do After Installing Ubuntu On A Chromebook Using Crouton ~ Ubuntu / Linux blog
| | blog.m5e.de
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| After installing FreeBSD to my workstation, I wanted a desktop environment. I've installed gnome3 after reading the official documentation https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/x11-wm.html. But nothing has worked. So, I installed the nvidia-driver for my two GPUs. The first documentation I've found is from "7.3-RELEASE": https://docs.freebsd.org/doc/7.3-RELEASE/usr/share/doc/en/articles/compiz-fusion/nvidia-setup.html. (I use 11.1-RELEASE) Don't use that documentation to make your settings in /boot/loader.conf! There stands: nvidia_load="YES" And that's simply not right for the newest driver! You should enter the following line: