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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 10th, 2023

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  • It’s in the readme. Several comments above this and around this all mention it. You can search for it and you will find it.

    Dei really shouldn’t be considered politics of course. It should just be a part of being a decent person. But those who persecute others or don’t care about the persecution of others at least. Always have to put on a show to make everything about them. How acknowledging traditionally excluded people is somehow an attack or imposition on them


  • Being left or right doesn’t make you good or bad. There are plenty of reasonable right-wing groups. However few to none of them identify as right wing. The Democrats in the United States for instance. A staunchly, solidly right-wing group. That most people somehow mistakenly think are left wing.

    No, the people desperate to identify themselves with vagaries such as left or right. Almost without exception are some of the worst most horrible people you’ll ever meet. Only trying to deny the failures of their ideas, or deflect from the horrible things they want to do to others. Leninists and fascists are both Prime examples of this.

    Anyone who talks or acts like DEI is a problem is a clown who deserves to be ridiculed. Its possible to have substantive nuanced criticism of DEI. Left or right. But DEI isn’t the problem. The people whining about it typically are.








  • Yes it is minimally at least in spirit the successor to the Centos distribution. Though if you are new to linux. Something like mint would probably be a better starting point. The nice thing about Centos and Rocky though. Are that their long-term support is some of the best. And for things like DaVinci resolve. They are one of the few distributions technically supported by the developer. You can get resolved on other distributions. They just aren’t officially supported.

    The main system I run on is a 6th gen i7, 4 cores, 8 threads. 16gb ddr4 with a second hand AMD 5400 with 4gb vram. If you’re doing 3d. Which I assume you are, vram will likely be the first hard wall you might hit. If your scene takes up more than the total vram of your system your speeds will likely crater or crash outright. After that your system Ram is the next big determiner. 3D scenes can be very data intensive. Even if you have a video card with tens of gigabytes of vram. If you have to transfer small chunks through your system Ram to get it there it’s still going to slow it down. After that a CPU is important. But less so than you might think. Rendering you are going to prefer to do on your GPU or APU. It is exponentially faster than doing it on the CPU alone. Though modern blender allows you to use both at once. As well as multiple graphics cards.

    Honestly just about anything from the last 10 years is an okay starting point.