

My 3070Ti also doing just fine - both for Gaming and for running Llama.
Now, to be honest, I never had a chance to use AMD GPU on Linux, so I can’t really say if it is at par with AMD GPU performance or not.


My 3070Ti also doing just fine - both for Gaming and for running Llama.
Now, to be honest, I never had a chance to use AMD GPU on Linux, so I can’t really say if it is at par with AMD GPU performance or not.


When it comes to Nvidia driver for Linux, my suggestion is - always stick to the version you find stable enough.
In my case, Last Nvidia 580 driver version works smoothly on my Desktop. Earlier I was on 550.
On a side note, faulty RAM often cause system freeze/crash. You might want to run memtest from boot menu as well.


PGP integration? Thunderbird has in-built support for PGP, isn’t it?
BTW, most of my incoming emails are routed (and encrypted) via addy.io and never faced any issue in opening encrypted (and signed) emails in Thunderbird.


Off-topic: For RSS feed, you might want to have a look at Miniflux[1] if your also into self-hosting.


Thunderbird


Do you know if a similar report exists for Intel based CPUs?


Not sure about Fedora, but openSUSE Tumbleweed and Arch have this enabled for a while now: https://www.phoronix.com/news/openSUSE-TW-x86-64-v3-RPM


If you consider the core count in modern server grade CPUs, this makes sense.
The good news is Nvidia consumer grade GPUs don’t even support vGPU and can’t be passed though if Host OS is using it.