💾 Archived View for tilde.cafe › ~chrono › blog › 2022-01-16-not-distrohopping.gmi captured on 2023-03-20 at 18:20:21. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2022-03-01)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
I woke up decently early, I went ahead and decided to spend some time on our family desktop instead of the laptop I normally work on. However, I realized it had a pretty annoying problem. The screen turned black for a second and then it came back. I had recently updated its system (Linux Mint) to version 20.3, and it seemed to had worked fine, I took a timeshift backup just in case, so I planned on restoring it later once I finished some work I had to do.
First I tried to check the graphics driver settings, the desktop has a low end NVIDIA quadro card, so I assumed it could be having issues of some sort. I looked up some useful information and ideas in a few forums, but nothing seemed to be solving the issue, however, sometimes the screen would just not work even when left alone, and others, it would be fine despite heavy use. I was struggling to find some pattern that could give me any other hints at what was causing the issue.
Then I decided to change the plug. The graphics card uses mini Display Port, which is not really that great of a port, so I finally figured it might as well be the root of the issue.
And voila, the problem was solved, I was just about to try and put something like Solus OS in there, but the problem was not even that.
And I don't really know why I did not figure it out earlier. The screen didn't even showed up the monitor logo at boot or anything else, it was just barely keeping itself on.
So, today I learned that you should not jump to conclusions when you have not even tried the simplest solution there is to a problem.
This has been day 85 of #100DaysToOffload[1]