

Post dmesg output again


Post dmesg output again


sudo apt install --reinstall nvidia-driver


Disable Secure Boot in your BIOS. It should load after that, but if not, just reinstall the driver package.
The issue is in the lines with the keyword “taint” because the driver isn’t signed and cooperating with your Secure Boot setup.


I see no output pasted, but you probably need to run something like sudo dmesg | grep -i nvidia to find the issue.
My guess is that the kernel modules build failed, and the Nouveau driver can’t load.


Just uninstall theatesy kernel packages and it will be gone from the Grub boot menu, or you can also manually set the default Grub version to boot very easily (guides and docs everywhere online).


Fedora 44’s DTB implementation actually makes the Snapdragon SoCs work pretty well. I’d give it a look.
Valve also has the Frame running on Snapdragon’s, so that means full SoC performance and GPU implementation. How whatever they got working trickles down to the community remains to be seen.
AMD is launching their ARM chips this year.
Nvidia keeps pushing theirs back because the first gen was horrible, and the 2nd is already sounding problematic.


Fedora or Debian, but it depends on what you’re going to be using it for.
Maybe you want a NAS OS instead? Maybe a media system like Open Filevault? If just runnings VMs and Containers, maybe something geared towards that.
Fedora does have some nice preconfigured stuff like Cockpit and several helper automations by default. Yes, they can be installed on Debian, but it’s extra steps.


Detected means the system sees them. Mounted means the partitions in those drives have been mapped to a local area on your filesystem where you can access them.
Depending on your desktop and settings, this is usually an automatic thing for well known filesystems like NTFS or FAT, but not so with encrypted volumes because there are extra steps to mounting them during boot (like a passphrase).
If they you had Bitlocker enabled in Windows, then they will not automount. So if in Gnome open up the ‘Disks’ app, or ‘Partition Manager’ in KDE, see if your dicks show up there, then click on the partition you want to mount and it should ask for your disk password to mount it.
Not that I’ve heard of this. This isn’t a compressed package in the same way a zip is, it’s an application package.


I assume you mean they aren’t mounted and readily showing up for access. Are they encrypted?
Open whatever disk manager you like and see if there drives are detected, but just not mounted. Usually the case if they are encrypted.
That zip file contains an rpm package that has the PPD files. You’ll need to be on an RPM-based distro to install it as-is, or use a tool to unpack it.
What distro are you running?


Same way you made it work on Deck, again. SteamInput will map controllers to input devices detected by Dolphin, and you map to whatever you need to map to in whatever way you want.


Same as it is on Deck. It’s just a Deck in a different form factor from the user standpoint. Everything will operate the same.


Quite awhile ago, but that’s not the barrier here.


The PS5 is essentially just a PC anyway, you just need to get through the Hypervisor BS as this guy did. It has AMD CPU/GPU inside, so it’s just a matter of making the kernel drivers detect what I imagine to be standard AMD RDNA2, but a custom identifier GPU detect and go to work.
Nice job though.


Nah, it’s not that risky if your tooling and process is solid. I have thousands of edge devices out in the field doing firmware updates on carrier boards from a specific manufacturer and have never had one fail or brick in update. Why? Because their tooling is absolutely fantastic and pretty bulletproof.
Even a simple {checksum>transfer>checksum>write>checksum} is pretty safe, UNLESS…you know the carrier you’re flashing doesnt have the ability to do so, in which case, you definitely put a warning like this on your product because you know it has a penchant for failure.


When they do this, they know they have a problem with their flash utils and process 🤣
I’d leave it alone.


Not being bristly at all. Your comments seem to assume: 1) People don’t already know (check the thread you’re in) 2) Valve is doing something wrong, and/or 3) They are somehow at fault for something, like stolen valor or not giving credit where credit is due.
You suggested your comment was pedantic, and I confirmed, and it’s because of your tone. I’m not rage replying to your comments, just correcting the context because I feel you have the wrong take.


Nope. Anything ARM. Meaning tablets can run x86 games with Proton+FEX if that be the case. Also getting the MacOS segment back into the fold. ARM laptops, hell, maybe even Apple portable devices, who knows.
It’s not just about their own hardware, but my thinking is that the Deck 2 will be ARM for power consumption reasons, so this all makes a lot of sense. The Frame isn’t really just a VR devices, it’s also going to be SteamOS, so that means a virtual desktop and all the usual Linux apps and such. I’m sure it will sell on its own as a productivity device as much as a gaming device. No reason it can’t fill the market gap that awful Apple headset screwed up so poorly.
Can you run
nvidia-smiand see what the output is?