tekato

joined 1 month ago
[–] tekato 1 points 41 minutes ago (1 children)

Technically it has been a thing since like 2015, but Pipewire 1.0 was only released 10 months ago , even though many distributions were already using it by default since 2021 (Fedora) and 2022 (Ubuntu, Pop! OS), given how much of an improvement it was over pulseaudio.

[–] tekato 3 points 5 hours ago

Yeah it is interesting how they don’t advertise it. Who knows what else they have lol

[–] tekato 6 points 5 hours ago (2 children)

Also, it might be worth noting that Strawberry does support SPC AND VGM files since 2022.

[–] tekato 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Makes sense. Thanks!

[–] tekato 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Not trying to blame you or anything, just stating the facts. It does sound like you don’t want to hear the other side though, and are completely convinced that these issues you’re having are normal to the average Linux system.

Installing a recent version of a normal Linux distribution (Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, Mint) will come by default with the following: Pipewire server (most likely wireplumber), Wayland, network drivers (except Debian) for most adapters, stable graphics drivers (unless you’re an NVIDIA victim), a DE of your choice (KDE, GNOME, Cosmic, etc). This setup will not have any audio cracking or popping, no flickering at certain resolutions, working USB ports. However, if you’re the type who refuses to update from the unmaintainable Xorg, old pulseaudio/alsa drivers, uses some obscure distribution, uses an NVIDIA GPU, or uses hardware from 2 decades ago, then you’ll have a horrible experience and it will only get worse with time, not better (unless you have an NVIDIA GPU, which will get not-garbage drivers eventually).

[–] tekato 2 points 6 hours ago (6 children)

Can you name the format you’re using to store 1:54:48 of music in 4.72 MB?

[–] tekato 1 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

You get your music from GIMP?

[–] tekato 6 points 6 hours ago (10 children)

You are saving your music in a format more efficient than opus or aac? What format is that?

[–] tekato 1 points 8 hours ago (6 children)

What’s the “plenty of stuff that doesn’t work”? And what audio/video issues are you having? Pipewire is miles better than anything Windows can conjure up in latency, quality, and customization. Video is literally just rendering pixels, which works with web browsers, and local video players (mpv and vlc). The only valid complaint is [Windows] software availability.

[–] tekato 5 points 8 hours ago (5 children)

Where do you even get an audio file with a .xcf format?

[–] tekato 14 points 8 hours ago (12 children)

You have support for .wav .flac .mp3 .opus, why would you use anything else?

[–] tekato 6 points 2 days ago

This isn’t really driver related. It is the Wayland compositor’s job to properly handle multiple GPUs, which is lacking in some (a very popular, Wayland library that lacks proper multi-GPU support is wlroots) compositors. Vulkan drivers and DRM are already enough to properly handle multiple GPUs. I guess Wayland implementers just haven’t cared enough about the issue, or maybe are figuring out a “perfect” way to address it (a la 3 year long pull request on wayland-protocols repo incoming)

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