In the end everything that is storage can also be used as memory. You could print it to paper and scan it back in when the cpu requires it (and write a memory interface to do so)… It would just be terribly slow if you don’t use something like DRAM
In the end everything that is storage can also be used as memory. You could print it to paper and scan it back in when the cpu requires it (and write a memory interface to do so)… It would just be terribly slow if you don’t use something like DRAM
Yeah aeems a pretty useless edit for an obvious fact. Especially as in this case you would need tires half the circumference of the original to make sense… Gotta be some tiny tires…
Edit, had it the wrong way around
Yes please, I’ve just been hit by this yesterday. Though there are workarounds… But they aren’t pretty.
Yes and before valve got involved gaming on wine was a hit and miss (mostly a miss). Whereas now basically 100% of the games i play just work with no to minimal tinkering. They put in a lot of effort to get all the kinks out. And steam input is also a huge factor in this. Downplaying their involvement is akin to downplaying wine’s achievements because it’s built on top of linux.
There’s not going to be a single worthwhile game that will run natively at 4k. And i have my doubts about 1080@120 too. Maybe they can keep their polygons so low they can actually reach it, but then what’s the point?
Are you sure the game is running on the correct GPU?. My older GTX1080 was always supported fine by proton. I’m not familiar with how garuda is set up but i assume it has a properly working PRIME setup by default. See if you have nvtop installed and on which GPU the game actually runs. For more info look here: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PRIME
If only it was mentioned in the article…
This is mainly data reported from desktop PCs, so no, SteamOS is not a thing at the moment on such machines.
You can use a ramdisk to use memory as storage. And if it’s volatile memory just be sure to never power it down. Ignoring the applicability of it of course.