

i think it’s just that frosting kinda looks like cum


i think it’s just that frosting kinda looks like cum

Orion Browser supports extensions and seems okay.
Linux sometimes has trouble with NTFS partitions. Consider moving it to your Ubuntu partition and trying it again.
For Adobe Acrobat, well, it’s an Adobe product, and those are famously not compatible with Linux at all in any capacity. You’ll have to find something to replace it with or spin up a Windows virtual machine to run it.
For Cyberpunk, where did you get it and and what have you tried? Also, consider volunteering any other information that might be helpful (distro, hardware, etc.), I don’t think either of us wants to play 20 Questions to help you troubleshoot.
What games and what software?


What problems have you had with it? I’ve used it for several years now and honestly can’t remember a time when it fell short.


Firefox + UBO?

Not all, but most of it is from infrared, with a little under half of all light recieved from the sun being infrared.* But yes, we would lose our only source of renewable energy and eventually either freeze or starve to death.
*Based on a quick skim of a Wikipedia article


Honestly, for any semi-modern hardware, the different amount of “bloat” between any two distros is small enough to be irrelevent for most everything you would do on a computer up to and including gaming, especially compared against Windows. Yes, Arch may be less bloated than, say, Ubuntu, but are you really going to notice or care that your system is idling at 1.2 GB of RAM usage instead of 800 MB?


I think that, while yes, LLMs are an option for data storage, I don’t think that they’re worth the effort. Sure, they might have a very wide breadth of information that would be hard to gather manually, but how can you be sure that the information you’re getting is a good replica of the source, or that the source that it was trained on was good in the first place? A piece of information could come from either 4chan or Wikipedia, and unless you had the sources yourself to confirm (in which case, why use the LLM as all), you’d have no way of telling which it came from.
Aside from that, just getting the information out of it would be a challenge, at least for the hardware of today and the near future. Running a model large enough to have a useful amount of world knowledge requires a some pretty substantial hardware if you want any amount of speed that would be useful, and with rising hardware costs, that might not be possible for most people even years from now. Even with the software, if something with your hardware goes wrong, it might be difficult to get inference engines working on newer, unsupported hardware and drivers.
So sure, maybe as an afterthought if you happen to have some extra space on your drives and oodles of spare RAM, but I doubt that it’d be worth thinking that much about.
OP is (presumably) vision impaired and accessibility still sucks on Linux.