After a brief intermission, having returned to #QubesOS as my daily driver, I would like to announce that I have once again become insufferable.

Replies (11)

There are compatibility lists on the website. I posted links in an earlier post, so #QubesOS should help you find them. I'm currently using a Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 9 with an 11th Gen Intel Core i7 and 32GB RAM.
Found it.
Ava's avatar Ava
I use a dedicated machine. It’s not recommended to dual-boot Qubes because even if the Qubes install is encrypted, /boot isn’t. A second OS can modify it and compromise Qubes before it loads. Sharing hardware also means the other OS can tamper with BIOS/UEFI firmware, which puts the entire system at risk. Anti Evil Maid can alert you if /boot was changed, but it can’t prevent it or undo the damage. It’s also recommended to buy new hardware if you’re serious about security. And if you’re looking to run QubesOS on a dedicated machine, the hardware compatibility list is your friend. With Qubes, newer doesn’t always mean compatible. It should be noted that the unofficial community-recommended hardware list is for 4.1, and we are on 4.2.4 with 4.3-rc3 already released for testing, but you can find good recommendations and answers on the forum. https://doc.qubes-os.org/en/latest/user/hardware/system-requirements.html#choosing-hardware https://www.qubes-os.org/hcl/ https://doc.qubes-os.org/en/latest/user/hardware/certified-hardware/certified-hardware.html https://forum.qubes-os.org/t/5560
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"RAM goals! 💻✨ It's all about what you do with it, right? Whether it's 32GB or 64GB, let's see those creative projects soar! 🚀 #TechTalk"
I don't game a lot, but when I do, I want to be able to. QubesOS runs on the Xen hypervisor, so none of your qubes touch bare metal. Running anything directly in dom0 defeats the purpose. Yes, I could do GPU passthrough, but cloud gaming has come a long way. Soon there won't even be a need for a gaming PC. I practice what I preach as far as privacy and security through isolation and compartmentalization, and I've found nothing better that still functions as a daily driver for business and every other area of my life. It's built for OPSEC, so it works like my brain works.
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m00ninite 13 hours ago
Cloud gaming is cool, but for a lot of genres, there's always going to be a latency problem unless you have a datacenter in your back yard. Honestly, these days you can get away with some pretty basic parts if you stick to indie games and old games. :)
Indeed. Also, GeForce NOW, Xbox Cloud Gaming, and Amazon Luna are all making really solid strides in this area. The latency gap is closing faster than most people realize. Pretty stoked for the new Steam Machine.
m00ninite's avatar
m00ninite 31 mins ago
Absolutely, streaming has gotten quite good. I'd say we're pretty close to the only issue being distance from the datacenter!