So is there any way to use these as a standard monitor? Is the python package/turing software/AIDA 64 needed to output video to them or just the sensor data? I just want a tiny screen for my server for diagnosing bootloader issues.
Hello. Recently after cloning my C to another Drive, then making that drive my new boot drive. I started having issues with reseting my PC. After the process it simply says "Couldn't reset system."
That's odd, that never happened to me. Sometimes certain USB controllers are picky so maybe try a different USB port. If not then I'd post this on the BeadaPanel forum, link is in the video description.
I have not been able to find bottles c_drive. I am running Fedora 40. I have tried to replicate the path shown in video but it does not work. Any suggestions?
I've been bouncing back and forth between ChimeraOS and BazziteOS. I've stayed on BazziteOS for almost a year because I use Sunshine to stream games outside my home and have been having a good time. ChimeraOS is great also because it seems to just work as long as you meet the requirements. Great video.
error: Nothing matches com.usebottles.bottles in remote flathub hi i have enbled linux on my macos, i follwed your video to install flatpak, then i tied to enter the install command into my penguin terminal and i get the message above..... what am i doing wrong have i missed a step
It's basically Steam OS but there are some differences especially in desktop mode. For example Steam OS uses KDE desktop while ChimeraOS uses Gnome. Also the browser based app used to install non-Steam games is unique to ChimeraOS. And yes it's unfortunate Nvidia isn't supported but it's not surprising, Nvidia generally has worse support on Linux. But recently Nvidia finally decided to go open source with their drivers, so we should be seeing much better support in the near future.
@@akshat8586 Open source nouveau driver for NVIDIA still isn't a thing. But official versions are fine now. They're still inferior to windows (lack of some options, no GeForce Experience) but NVIDIA finally recognized the existing client base on Linux
I entered in the Command Prompt and gave it copy paste to ''python.exe -m pip install -r requirements.txt'' and it says: This app can't run on your PC. To find a version for your PC, check with the software publisher. What can I do in this case. Thank you for your answer if you can help me.
I installed on PC Python 3.12.6 (64bit) and Python launcher 3.12.6 (32bit)...could this be the problem because Python Launcher is in 32bit? I greatly appreciate a response
@@traiantara3032 I don't use Windows 11 so I don't know for sure. I'd also try "py.exe" instead. I saw this on the troubleshooting page: github.com/mathoudebine/turing-smart-screen-python/wiki/Troubleshooting Also I googled the error you mentioned and found this article: habr.com/en/companies/hetmansoftware/articles/549410/ Hope this helps.
Thanks for the great video! I have gone ahead and added Tony Hawk 1 + 2 as Verified on Epic as well as configure the game so that GE Proton is used automatically so videos will work for everyone out of the box.
Sure thing! Sounds like you're on the team who develops it? It's a great distro and I felt it was worth making a dedicated video. I didn't know about it back when I made my previous videos on Linux distros for gaming, but someone mentioned it in the comments. And thanks for making those changes for Tony Hawk!
I don't know whether it is necessary for other distros, but on _Debian_ you *MUST* run sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386; apt update *PRIOR TO* _installing_ Steam. [While most games you'll play are 64-bit, Steam itself is 32-bit.] *BEFORE* _running_ Steam for the first time, you also have to install vulkan-tools:i386 And, if you have an NVIDIA GPU (and are using either of the packages _nvidia-driver_ or _nvidia-smi,_ which you most probably use, because gaming on Nouveau doesn't really work), you also need to install, *BEFORE* _running_ Steam for the first time, nvidia-driver-libs:i386 With these steps, Steam will run perfectly on Debian Stable, despite the fact that Debian doesn't incorporate the latest packages into their stable releases. *Edit:* While I usually use _aptitude_ instead of _apt,_ for a Steam installation _apt_ needs to be used on Debian: _aptitude_ does not find the steam package and makes you install the package _steam-installer_ instead, which will cause all sorts of dependencies trouble. In addition, trying to remove/purge steam with _aptitude_ would result in essential libraries being removed as well. So, use _apt_ for anything Steam-related. Also, it is generally *not advisable* to use _aptitude_ with the _-y_ option, because that can result in some nasty surprises due to _aptitude's_ dependency policy.
can eanyone help? i have been trying to play games that use direct x 11 and none direct x games wont work even with bottles. nothing is working i have watched so meany videos and it still wont work. i wanna fully switch to linux. and i dit. ik this laptop can play this game cause i use to play it on windows. and ik it works on linux cause i dit research
@PhazerTech ok so. I am running the fame threw steam and it's integrated intel hd graphics. Its bad but ik it can run phasmophobia. I played it on windows awhile back. But ye. I am using arch linux.
@@PIECEOUT592 Make sure you have these two packages installed: mesa vulkan-intel If you run 32 bit games then you'll also need the lib32 packages as well. See here for more info: wiki.archlinux.org/title/Intel_graphics#Installation
@@PhazerTech thinking about trying Ubuntu, mint, or nobara those seem like good options to try have heard mixed things on nobara but definitely trying Ubuntu just gonna learn how to dual boot
For sure, like I mentioned in my other videos I recommend Kubuntu because it has a better UI in my opinion, but there's nothing wrong with vanilla Ubuntu. Nobara is preconfigured and comes with preinstalled gaming apps, good choice if you only care about gaming.
Oof. Trying to install this recently has not gone well... First off my bios hid the secure boot setting (fucking MSI), then for wherever reason the boot manager was being a pita so I had to select Grub instead. The partitions were being a pita... Finally get in, and pacman/yay are fucked... Also, can I get a context menu with admin fucking permissions so I don't have to stare at god damn terminals all day?
I just installed ubuntu 24.01 lts version. Yes its gnome but honestly I don't mind it, it gives a different vibe from windows. And I have set it up for dual boot without many issues. Had to select ubuntus efi first as a priority in bios. That way I boot with grub and can choose between the two systems If I want. What really surprised me after coming from Fedora kde plasma version 40 is how it just works out of box literally. I even have my nvidia 550 drivers pre installed. Gnome is different but a lot faster and idk fancier then fedora I used. Now I need to figure out some apps how to install them and maybe try running some games. Also it seems like I can open up my windows partition and go through files if necessary. Overall so far its one of the better linuxes I installed so far. Only thing I liked with fedora is how light it was. Only 8gb compared to 28. But I don't mind. Because I don't need to hassle to install drivers and browsers and what not.
MetaTrader 5 - Portable When I copy MT5 Portable to the C drive of Bootles, it works. When I try to run MT5 Portable from a folder outside the C drive of Bootles, like from a different SSD drive, it doesn't work as it should. Looks like applications outside the C drive of Bootles will struggle to run or seem to give errors. Looking for a solution.
Yes, I mentioned that in the video. When running an .exe, sometimes it's necessary to place it in the windows file system first before running it. The solution is to go into Bottles settings and set the default directory to your secondary SSD, as I showed in the video.
@@PhazerTech Wow. This really worked. I had seen it but I hadn't seen it. The problem was why I wasn't putting ":rw" at the end of the folder. But looking at what you posted again, you are completely right. Thank you very much indeed. You saved my life. lol. Seriously, it helped a lot with the video and the response. Thanks!
September 2024 update: Stormgate came out a few months ago and it's even playable with Proton. It has mixed reviews but I've been enjoying it. Tribes 3 also runs pretty well. I've been running Linux full-time for 2 weeks in the form of CachyOS on my laptop and OpenSUSE Tumbleweed on my old desktop, both with Nvidia. I'm gonna put vanilla Arch on my all-AMD build that I almost have all the parts for. I've used Linux on and off since 2015 but now I have the confidence to stick to it. I take the time to troubleshoot pretty much everything I want to run. I have all my pain points sorted out aside from converting all my VST plugins.
Nice! I tried a few games of the Stormgate beta a few months ago and it even worked back then with Proton. Pretty impressive. And that's great you're taking the time to ease into Linux full time, everything should be smooth once you get it all setup. Also have you heard of Yabridge? It can run Windows VST plugins directly without converting anything.
@@PhazerTech I have used Yabridge before but when I last tried to install Softube almost a year ago, it didn't want to work but that was more of a WINE issue.
Which library are you using? If using the official RPi OS then trying installing lgpio with this command: sudo apt install python3-rpi-lgpio I've updated the guide to show this.
When launching webui I get the following error : note: This error originates from a subprocess, and is likely not a problem with pip. ERROR: Failed building wheel for tokenizers ERROR: ERROR: Failed to build installable wheels for some pyproject.toml based projects (tokenizers) Do you know why I'm having this issue ?
Which distro? Looks like webui requires Python 3.10, but Ubuntu is now on Python 3.12 and you can't install 3.10 on Ubuntu 24.04. You can try using pypy or anaconda to create a virtual env for 3.10. But generally speaking I now recommend using comfyui instead of webui because the maintainers of webui don't seem to have any plans to update it to newer Python versions. I'll make a note of this on my written guide.
every time i check a "gaming on linux" video or guide its talking only about Steam. What about non-steam games? What about games that come from EA Launcher or Blizzard... or even android emulators? Also what about connectivity to other systems on the home network such as TV, printers, other computers' shared folders etc? 🤔 Also what if i want to connect to a vpn? Is it as easy as it is from windows? Or do i need 3rd party software like OpenVPN etc
I covered non-Steam games in two other videos on Lutris and Bottles: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5mOCwpS6sII.html ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5d-l8s9IgWw.html Everything else you mentioned works fine on Linux and in fact some things are easier than Windows. For example most printers don't need drivers or anything, it will just work straight out the box. For VPNs most will work but compatibility will depend on the particular VPN you want to use. Be sure to check out my Linux playlist for more helpful videos.
@@PhazerTech ye i will be checking those. I used Ubuntu for a little while way back around 2010... well not much used as i mostly checked it out for few weeks. Seems alot of things have changed since then and i am considering to switch soon
@@Vesp3r1987 When it comes to gaming a lot has changed in the last 5 years alone.. night and day difference. Overall I use a lot of different applications on my PC and I've been able to migrate entirely over to Linux for everything. Feels good to be free of MS.
@@PhazerTech returning here to say that the latest windows 11 update pushed me harder into linux than any promotional video ive seen in the past 15 years... I mean why tf would they just block user apps with no visible way to unblock them and throw salt in the would by saying "your administrator blocked this app"... Btch I AM the administrator :O Anyways, downloading Ubuntu now and lets see how this goes 😅
I don't know why, but on my Pop!_OS, whatever I enter doesn't work. It's impossible to set lower clocks; an error pops up saying it can't be applied. Only reducing the TDP works.
Hi, found this amazing video. I wonder if I can use this raw video into a GUI create with Streamlit ? is it possible? Cause I am using the pi cam as the "eye" for my robot and I need to see and manuever the robot from my computer.
Yes should be possible to integrate it with OpenCV to read in the RTSP stream. See my Smart Security Camera playlist project for an example of this using Python.
Small correction. The 2N7000 worked for this application but it's not a great choice because 150mA is pushing it. After looking at the datasheet again I'd use a different transistor for peace of mind in long term use. For example the 2N2222 is a BJT that is suitable here. The IRF3205 MOSFET I showed in the previous video is another good choice but it's large and overkill for this. It seems the most appropriate MOSFETs for this are mostly surface mount, not breadboard/stripboard compatible. But if you go with the relay module boards that I linked in the video description then you won't need to worry about this. Also I forgot to mention the jumper on the relay board allows you to reverse the input signal, in other words the relay will turn on when it receives a low signal from the Pi, not a high signal. But in most cases you can ignore the jumper.
i wasn't gonna subscribe after watching a video on how to play my game on linux but after watching this one i think you deserve more subscribers, you are on the good side lol
WARNING: Running "sudo apt install amdgpu-dkms rocm" WILL trash Ubuntu's python (You'd have to reinstall) - DO NOT USE THIS COMMAND! Use this instead: "amdgpu-install -y --usecase=graphics,rocm,hiplibsdk"
No it won't. I just tested on a fresh install of Kubuntu 24.04 and everything works fine. It's possible your system recently had an update to Python or something, but whatever happened wasn't because of that command.
@@PhazerTech Yes, it will and i'm quite sure it's because of this command. Other people have had the same issue as me after running it. I also tested it on fresh install. I did your tutorial on a fresh install actually. Other than this, it worked well, thank you.
@@pruznak10 Well I can't reproduce it. Which version of Ubuntu did you use and which kernel? I know there was a bug in an older kernel but that has been resolved with newer kernels.
Those developers go out of their way to implement kernel level anti-cheat software which makes them incompatible with Linux. So the best thing you can do is email those developers and ask them to make their games Linux compatible. If enough people demand it, eventually they'll give in.