

Yes, Madison was the one. They were hilarious in the video where they won a free computer but when she came to actually work for the company, it was apparently a much worse experience.
Yes, Madison was the one. They were hilarious in the video where they won a free computer but when she came to actually work for the company, it was apparently a much worse experience.
That was my reading of it as well. Maybe a bit of technical information tutoring to get them up and running. I would also imagine that Valve is contributing upstream from SteamOS back to Arch.
I wonder if anyone has compiled any data like that to show who is going out of their way to break Linux compatibility. I’d love to avoid publishers and/or devs that specifically use such anti consumer tactics.
Maybe setup a live USB and mount it from a live environment to see what it comes up with?
I must have just missed that originally, I was commenting before coffee.
I see you have the combination graphics (Optimus is what it was originally called IIRC) which has a history of sleep wake issues, that might be a good place to start on the monitor search.
Sorry, I forgot that it doesn’t default to latest. Make a share text of journalctl -b instead
Any additional details you can add would go a long way towards troubleshooting. That desktop are you using (ex: Gnome, KDE, etc) and what model of laptop, the full hardware specs including CPU, GPU, WiFi model, etc. Finally, you’ll want to look at the system logs to see if there’s anything useful in there after resuming from sleep (journalctl).
Craft Computing did a few videos on this subject. If you’re trying to virtualize multiple systems, you might find this video useful.