this post was submitted on 03 Feb 2024
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Steam Deck

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A place to discuss and support all things Steam Deck.

Replacement for r/steamdeck_linux.

As Lemmy doesn't have flairs yet, you can use these prefixes to indicate what type of post you have made, eg:
[Flair] My post title

The following is a list of suggested flairs:
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[PSA] - Sharing important information.
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[Update] - An update to a previous post.
[Meta] - Discussion about this community.

Some more Steam Deck specific flairs:
[Boot Screen] - Custom boot screens/videos.
[Selling] - If you are selling your deck.

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[โ€“] [email protected] 0 points 7 months ago (1 children)

Even a non-aur build has broken for me. You cannot just take a snapshot of a bleeding edge distro and call it stable and then blame the end users when a normal operation like building from source breaks things (because that's all the AUR really is. As long as you meet the dependencies, the software in the AUR should just work, I've used pkgbuild files to compile stuff from source and use on RHEL without issue)

I've been burned by Manjaro a few times, I refuse to let it go.

[โ€“] [email protected] 0 points 7 months ago

I've been running it for years, on a laptop with an Nvidia card no less. Manjaro seems to be more unstable than Ubuntu in terms of regular updates. Even with the AUR, you can just wait for the packages to get updated for the breakages to go away. Every major breakage I've encountered was either an upstream issue (yay, rolling releases!) or an AUR package not indicating its dependencies properly (producing errors like "libgarglesplurt.19.0.so not found" on startup). Arch installs have broken for me in the same way, usually at the same time.

If you're complaining that building shit from source breaks, maybe put the blame on the packages that apparently refuse to build if you're missing a minor update, or the kernel modules that claim support for the latest kernel but just don't compile.

Arch isn't stable. Manjaro is a tiny bit more stable. If you want stable, pick Fedora or SUSE or Ubuntu.