Would love to have the option to mark as read after voting.
Or maybe it’s an option in the Lemmy account? Haven’t found it though.
If I recall correctly compression, especially lz4, has been shown to impact performance negligably.

Is it beta now? I tried alpha 8 or alpha 9 and ran into a lot of issues (3 or 4 independent ones) with my multimonitor setup and eventually just gave up because of the frustration of having to reconfigure all 3 monitors every reboot.
Bazzite never had a problem, but locked down some dev stuff I wanted to do.
CachyOS has been solid but every once in a while I will experience one of the multi monitor issues I had on Cosmic Alpha. But I can live with that.
Oh. Huh. Okay no, just a fundamental misunderstanding as to what “read” means vs what “hide” means.
Face-palm.
I just found the “Hide all read” button.
Thanks!
Would love to have the option to mark as read after voting.
Or maybe it’s an option in the Lemmy account? Haven’t found it though.
When I built my home server this is what I did with all VMs. Learned how to change the start up delay time in esxi and ensured everything came back online with no issues from a cold built.
Rip VMware.
Cachy has, at least in my experience with a Zen 5 processor, it’s own special Arch pacman repo with meta packages for various processor types. I believe for the most part mine uses Zen 4 packages.
Add your processor meta package and it adds the appropriate repo where packages have been custom built with feature flags / optimizations for that specific architecture of processors.
So it’s a little closer to Gentoo or LFS in those regards, without you having to actually build every package from scratch.
So while yes any distro could do this, in practice a lot don’t bother and only release basic i686/amd64/arm32/arm64 sets of packages. Whereas Cachy offers zen4-amd64 packages as an example, and I assume they offer various Intel architecture and other AMD architecture specific packages as well.