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I told it to power off. It rebooted to do updates. Once these updates were done, it powered off. Kinda like Windows. 😂
Except windows doesn’t ever actually shut down after the reboot if you tell it to “update and shut down” lmao
how’s the framework?
Not OP, but I bought one at the beginning of the year (with the same bezel color as OP, in fact) and I love it. I was originally worried that the keyboard felt cheap, but once the keys wore slightly (took about a week) it felt beautiful. Being able to move the I/O around has been amazing. I do somewhat wish I’d gotten the 16 with a GPU instead of the 13, but if I’m honest with myself, I didn’t really need it (and still don’t). Six months in, it seems like it’s holding up very well.
what desktop is that? fedora kde has separate options for shutdown and shutdown-and-update, same for reboot. I think it’s a native plasma 6 feature, integrates with packagekit and systemd’s special boot mode.
untattended updates are good. except of course if you want to gatekeep hard, but let’s pretend you do not. if the pros can easily turn it off there’s absolutely no problems with it. and we can. but for real desktop systems, it needs to be on by default.
ALL MY HOMIES HATE UNATTENDED UPGRADES
this is why I use Arch.
Framework ❤️
Just a heads up, if you’re on the 7040 mainboard, I needed to add this to the kernel command line on Debian 13 for reliable suspend/resume. Without it, the screen would just be grey sometimes and not resume
amdgpu.dcdebugmask=0x10
Edit: may also only affect the 2.8k display
Whelp you just described why it won’t be the year of the Linux desktop.
I’ve never had a Windows laptop suspend correctly, so…
I guess it’s the year of the macOS desktop?
“suspend” is Microsoft corpo speak to say “turn off the screen and fans and use 100% of the CPU to install updates, user expects to have its battery depleted when he comes back”