this post was submitted on 12 Dec 2023
13 points (100.0% liked)

Linux Furs

587 readers
1 users here now

A place for all Furries who use (or are interested in) Linux-based OS's to come, hang out, ask questions, and enjoy!

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I have an HP Victus laptop that I'm trying to get to fully work. It has two GPUs. The integrated is an AMD and the discrete is an Nvidia. For about a month I've been attempting to get Debian 12 to see and use the Nvidia card. My knowledge on anything Linux is not strong.

I got as far as getting the proprietary driver loaded. I just couldn't get anything to side load it when I launched anything.

I've stepped back a bit, and started to wonder if I'd have a better experience if I tried a different distro. I've heard some are better for multi-GPU situations like Manjaro.

So I guess I'm asking everyone if I should try jumping distros for this AMD/Nvidia situation?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

I'll give that a try this evening with a couple USB sticks. Besides the installer and that Manjaro delays the package releases, what would you say is the difference between Arch and Manjaro?

My first distro was actually LMDE on another laptop, and this time I just figured I'd try Debian this time. I know Manjaro is based on Arch like LMDE is to Debian.

[โ€“] [email protected] 2 points 11 months ago

Manjaro is aimed more at newcomers from what I know. You're usually supposed to use GUIs instead of CLIs for a lot of thing. Personally, I don't use it (Garuda and Endeavor are my favorites), but I don't see the problem with using it.

IMO, Arch (and most Arch-likes, Manjaro being the exception) has a big focus on customization. The goal of Arch is to let you basically do whatever you want, whereas Manjaro is designe to work out of the box. As kalzEOS on r/archlinux put it:

Manjaro (and other similar distros) is like ordering a pizza from a pizza place. It comes to you all done and ready. You accept whatever they put on it and eat, or you can pick the toppings that you don't like and eat the rest. Arch is like buying the bread, the sauce, the cheese and the toppings that you want, put them all together, cook it and enjoy. The final result is the same, but the first one takes less time to fill your stomach. Lol