Hello everyone! Right now I use Apple mainly but I do have experience with Ubuntu Studio. I’m migrating back and forth but I feel the hard switch is coming. I’ve just found that Ubuntu Studio throws problems left and right with audio production, but I have great luck with gaming.

So I kinda want to start over and Endeavor seems cool. Would I be able to use Endeavor/Arch for both making music AND gaming?

For what it’s worth, I use live recording and plugins for my music.

  • PainInTheAES@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    What kind of errors are you getting? Arch can be nice for up to date packages and stuff from the AUR. That makes it likely to support new technology and hardware that’s useful for stuff that’s pushing the envelope like gaming. But realistically any distro can be used for gaming or music production. If you want to try it why not.

    Even with endeavor you might need to spend a little more time configuring than Ubuntu studio tho.

    • SuperSynthia@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      Mostly my errors were issues with jack routing, audio working with Ardour then not working, Midi issues, crashing programs, it was just a hassle working with audio. Part of the reason I want to start over (and possibly use arch based distro ) is to know exactly from scratch how everything is set up. Easier to trouble shoot to me.

      As far as gaming goes, Proton & Lutris covered everything I needed. I like to play indie games, older AA/AAA titles, emulating retro games, and visual novels. Worst I had to do was some Lutris guides for a few visual novels.

    • SuperSynthia@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      That was my first thought, but I’m afraid I’d build a Franken Debian to use the latest versions of certain audio programs. I like flatpaks somewhat if I needed to compromise but I’ve heard it’s better for audio work to not use flatpaks

  • smoothbrain coldtakes
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    9 months ago

    I use Garuda for gaming. It’s Arch but built on the Zen kernel. It comes with drivers and stuff automatically for gaming, and it has Snapper for BRTFS snapshots, which automatically creates rollback points for you to restore to if any given update fails.

    Endeavour is alright and I used it for a while but I like Garuda if we’re sticking with Arch.

    My desktop runs Fedora because I wanted a more stable environment than a rolling release, but it runs just as well as Garuda did with less worrying about bleeding edge updates breaking something.

    Everything that matters for gaming is generally handled between Steam with Proton and both Nvidia and AMD have Linux drivers that are updated frequently with their own repositories for most distros.

    • SuperSynthia@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      I’ll check out Geruda and see if I like it. I looked at Fedora, just don’t know if I’m ready for Wayland yet

      • smoothbrain coldtakes
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        9 months ago

        Wayland’s been stable enough for me with a 3090 and a 1650ti, but “it works on my machine” is always the worst thing to hear.

        Garuda in x11 is good. Ran all my games at a good level, and in some cases better than Windows did because of the lack of bloat and BS.