Oof, that sounds like an appimage alright.
rotopenguin
If you haven't seen the first one, I can't imagine what sidereochronological phenomenon you've been lost in for the last decade and a half. It's a bridge-building game, but the bridge is made out of nodes of goo. The goo is both cute and not an ideal construction material.
If Apple would stop breaking game APIs for a second, then yes
Yeah, the problem is that there is a well-set standard for VRR on a regular DP connection, there's a so-so standard for VRR on HDMI, but there isn't a good standard for communicating VRR through an internal connection. The market is at a standstill with not enough tablet vendors asking for VRR, and neither the SoC vendors or the panel vendors want to be the first one to build only half of the solution. Apple or Samsung could build a full solution on their own and jumpstart that market, but can't be arsed.
JNot sure if the flash is "gone", the drive does still believe it has 256GB. I have seen drives die to where they completely forget their identity and are now "Phison controller with 32KB storage". All they have left is either some absurd concept of falling back to using the controller's on-die EEPROM, or they're telling you they have the smallest possible CHS size that isn't 0 just as a courtesy.
But yeah, the drive does look too mentally broken to continue.
You cut off the enumeration bit, but SMI01 USB DISK01 doesn't look like any brand I recognize. Flash sticks are cheap and pretty amazing, but one thing they are not is "terribly reliable". Better luck with the next stick, I mildly recommend making it a Samsung or Sandisk.
Also do "dmesg | grep -i firmware" to see what firmware loads the kernel squirted into the various device controllers.
I would recommend against installing ppas in general.
I think that Kubuntu/ubuntu Noble is on a pretty recent stable kernel as is. There would be something even fresher in the HWE track, dunno if that exists for noble yet. The DXVK version is up to Proton (so Proton-GE would be slightly fresher).
The Mesa version, I'm not sure where that comes from. You have an OS installed copy, you have a flatpak/snap version, but aiui Steam Runtime and/or Proton also likes to bring its own version.
Better gpu crash handling is a todo on Linux.
https://ubuntu.com/kernel/lifecycle https://www.phoronix.com/news/AMDGPU-Per-Ring-Resets
If the distro just boots into a live session, you can get a pretty good idea there. They're all working off of roughly the same kernel and driver and firmware sets, give or take some distros being a year out of date. The slower distros have something like "backports" or "enablement kernels" to still give you the option of pulling in newer stuff.
The graphics situation (compositor and mesa and kernel drivers and userland driver libraries) is more complicated. Especially with Nvidia. Your distro choice makes a much bigger impact there.
Ubuntu has its ups and downs when you're actually living with it, but they have a fantastic installer experience. I have had my fair share of bizarre dead ends with other distro installers, like Bazzite telling me "you need -860GB more space". Ubuntu puts you in a solid live-iso OS where the installer is just an app that you can drag to one side and run other tools before continuing. It tends to do sensible things if I go off the beaten path with a more advanced install.
Nowadays, I am happy with debootstrapping or btrfs send'ing an existing Debian install to set up a new system for myself. I still think that Ubuntu is reasonably likely to be a good experience for a newcomer.
By default, windows does "Fast Boot" which doesn't make booting any faster, but does have the benefit of leaving the volume in a mounted state when you shut it down.