

16·
8 days agoPlus, there’s all the cool stuff Valve has been doing for Linux gaming. All the effort into Proton, the steam deck, etc.
At this point, I’m sticking with Steam to reward them for investing in Linux.
Plus, there’s all the cool stuff Valve has been doing for Linux gaming. All the effort into Proton, the steam deck, etc.
At this point, I’m sticking with Steam to reward them for investing in Linux.
If you want to fully wipe the disks of any data to start with, you can use a tool like
dd
to zero the disks. First you need to figure out what your dive is enumerated as, then you wipe it like so:sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX
From there, you need to decide if you’re going to use them individually or as a pool.
!< s