Go to the game’s properties, then go to compatibility and force use of proton. If you’ve ever had it installed and deleted the proton files for a game, this is what you need to do to be able to use it on Linux again.
It should automatically swap A and B. A should always be current and B should always be previous. When you boot into B, it should change those behind the scenes so that the former B is now A, and the former A is now B.
It shouldn’t autoamtically update…
To answer the question for those wanting to revert, power the deck down, then hold the … button and power it up. Select the second option (B) and your deck will load back up in the previous version.
Shouldn’t be. For those with an LCD, with the added control and benefits in 3.5.5, the HD screen should also benefit more. If you can’t by an OLED version, $100 for that upgrade is probably a good deal.
You may need a bot. Those things will sell FAST.
Apaprently, it will boot if you just move the SSD from one to the other. Don’t know if it will update the OS properly with that method, though.
According to the video reviews I’ve seen, there are many threshholds (40, 60 and 90 Hz) so it can effectively run at 20Hz if needed (though why you’d want to run that low is beyond me).
No. The performance difference is due to less overhead, the device still has the same overall specs and performance profile. Some of you guys really go overboard with the tiniest of things.
It’s a “the new deck has a little less overhead and can get a few extra ounces of power out of comparable hardware” situation.
$150 is the sweet spot for me. I’d gladly pay that and trade in the old unit for a new one.
I’m sure they did that to catch the typos in searches.
If you’re reflashing the whole drive anyway, partition it before you start.
Format it, or extend the primary partition.