So I've been running Windows on my gaming system and Linux on my laptop for Uni for a while. I chose this to discourage working instead of relaxing, or gaming instead of working. However, I am finding that I often get the opportunity to work from home and I find it easier to just use my laptop on the go (I have a dual monitor setup + kvm switch so its a little annoying to have to come home and run 3 cables just for some extra screen realestate).

I want them to run the same OS so I can use the same tools and workflow. I use Ubuntu 23.04 on my laptop, W11 on my PC. I have nvidia GPU's in both (1660 Super Desktop and 3050 Laptop), so installing and maintaining drivers would ideally be easy. I would use Ubuntu but I plan to move away from it since they're moving away from .debs. Any recommendations? I am looking for stability, but something I can game on. I've never had a linux gaming pc so I don't know how much that changes things. I don't want to do much tinkering, I am more of a set an forget type.

I generally prefer Gnome, XFCE, KDE, Cinnamon, Mate in that order. I looked it up and a lot of the games I play are Proton DB Gold or up. The only game with an anticheat that I play is the MCC and I'll just disable the anticheat if its an issue.

    • JoshCodes@programming.dev
      hexagon
      ·
      11 个月前

      I'd love to do this someday but I really don't have the time to experiment at the moment. I need something that allows me to be lazy so I can just work on things.

      • alexcoder04@programming.dev
        cake
        ·
        11 个月前

        Was a joke, but tbh, I use Arch myself and it runs pretty ok. The problem is rather that you are tempted to experiment and waste your time (because you can).

        • JoshCodes@programming.dev
          hexagon
          ·
          11 个月前

          Well maybe once I get a job in tech (I graduate at the end of november) I could justify spending the time... it will give me a better understanding of computers after all.

  • odium@programming.dev
    ·
    11 个月前

    Try pop os. It's based on gnome and uses debian, so stable and similar to what you're used to. It doesn't need any configuration and handles hybrid graphics(when laptops have both an integrated gpu and a dedicated gpu) by default.