Spyke
beehaw.org

Seconded, also helps that the rpi-update and other utitilities for firmware updates/overclocking are already bundled and well supported.

3

This is either absolute approval of the power of a 486 (with turbo speed no less!), or some slight judgement over my Neon Genesis Evangelion obsession...

I'm fine with it either way!

2
beehaw.org

For desktop use I would recommend Raspberry Pi OS too - if it is going to be for desktop use, I found that using the option to boot directly from an SSD (if available) gives it a bit of extra smoothness.

2

Oh I remember that feature when it was 'coming soon', and never actually using it. Perfect opportunity to use it. Thanks for the reminder!

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beehaw.org

Lucky you with that Pi4. I think the official OS will be the most comfortable for general desktop use. If possible, boot from SSD (never USB) because microSD cards can occasionally crap out.

1

Its strange, bought it when it came out (a couple months after maybe?) when stock was no issue.

But recently I saw those stock issues and yep, feeling lucky!

Have got a SSD for that, thanks!

2
bbbhltzreply
beehaw.org

Ah, I meant never boot from a USB flash drive. Obviously use the USB ports but SSD is the fastest, then microSD, then regular USB.

1

Thanks for clearing that up. I thought there might be a major issue using usb for booting a ssd. I have all these things available. I kinda want to give myself the raspberry pi desktop tool challenge.

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beehaw.org

Nice case, can you tell us which one it is, please?

If I would use a Raspi as a desktop, I'd install Arch Linux ARM or Armbian on it, however Raspberry Pi OS is probably also a good choice.

1

A few years ago I had success running Ubuntu MATE on my pi (PI 2 Model B), all I did was writing, browsing and some emulation gaming but it ran pretty well.

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Laptop is being repaired for a couple weeks, so using my Raspberry Pi as a desktop for everything | Spyke