Update metadata and transcripts upto mid November 2025
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Episode: 4513
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Title: HPR4513: Living the Tux Life Episode 2 - Ventoy
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4513/hpr4513.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-11-22 15:16:17
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio episode 4,513 for Wednesday 19 November 2025.
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Today's show is entitled Living the Tux Life Episode 2 Ventoy.
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It is hosted by Al and is about 12 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is Al discusses using Linux as a daily driver.
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In this episode, I talked about Ventoy and Linux Mint.
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Hi and welcome to episode 2 of Living the Tux Life.
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I'd like to apologise to the poor quality of the audio on episode 1, I'll try and be
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better.
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So to recap, I want to get rid of my windows on my laptop and try to run Linux as my daily
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driver.
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This podcast see documents my story.
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Since last time, I was doing a lot of digital hopping as I normally do, but I think I found
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something I really like.
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To start, I'd like to introduce a piece of software called Ventoy, which has one end
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is normal USB A and the average USB C. So you can use it on new and modern hardware,
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new and modern and old hardware.
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It's a piece of software that makes any USB stick beautiful.
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We could set it up by either Windows or Linux, a process divides USB stick into two
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partitions.
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The first is a part of the one, the Ventoy boot OS, and the second is where you can store
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your ISO files, simply copy your ISOs to the storage partition.
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Using whatever message you like, fight through the file browser, unplug the USB stick and plug
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it into the machine you want to install the OS on.
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The piece you will boot into the Ventoy OS and it will display a load and a nice boot
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menu with all the ISOs on your USB stick.
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You can intersect the one you want to boot into to install.
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This is a gateway to try different distributors having to write each ISO to two USB using DD
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command.
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I've always been an Ubuntu fan, but I'm not clicking of the main no-no release.
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I've not found the side up, that's the dock, or having to install GNOME extension.
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That's two simple things.
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In the past, I said a little uncompany because I like how custom-arbitable it is using KDE.
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However, I ran an intern issue with Installer.
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One thing important to me is to make sure the laptop hard drive is encrypted in case I
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leave the house with the laptop.
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Also want to be able to hibernate the laptop, but there seems to be a bug with Ubuntu
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Installer which seems to etting up custom partitions with encrypted lugs using the Kaya Mara installation.
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It does crash it.
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There's an open bug for this, and even if you create the partition outside Installer,
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it still crashes.
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I did manage to get it working by installing an old version of Ubuntu and setting up a
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liquid-ed-lux partition, and then upgrading it too, but it seems a bit of a fath way
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of doing it, because I want to be able to run it through my laptop and just install
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the ISO and start again from scratch.
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So one of the main goals is to get the best battery-op installation possible on my laptop.
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I want to be able to close lid, have it go into deep-seeping, then quickly resume right
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where I left off when I opened it again.
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I'll talk more about this later in the show.
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I really like the look of operating system like Castio S, which is based on Art6, as a
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great design.
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Unstored it, and it was nice and fast, and then enjoyed the overall feel, but hibe-ladies
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didn't seem to work until a good couple of hours tinkling when it would know that.
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I also had a podcast that set some that they also had a received an update and it broke
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their system.
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A common issue would be the Edge1 releases.
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It also had an issue with the ButterFS install where his machine had crashed, and it basically
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corrupts his fast system, and he had to fix it by running some scandals.
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But for me, I want stability, it's important.
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This is why I like Ubuntu Dissues when using things like 8x4, 8x4 and LVM, and looks
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equipped with partitions.
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I've never had any problems in the past, so even though Castio Edge looks cool, it's
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not the right fit for me.
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I also tried some tiny managers.
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Tiling when they manage like Hyperland, which is interesting, but managing to be going
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far easier in files, isn't for me, or taking a time to learn the shortcuts for me, so
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I have to use Windows for work, I'm never going to remember when I keep swapping between
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the two.
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The only thing that I said before, that I want to put links on my wise t480 thinkpad,
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as it's a good machine, and I, an 8x5 with 16K RAM, and one of those external batteries
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so it can go for days without being plugged in.
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There's nothing wrong with it, the only reason I like looking to put links on it is not
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supported by Windows 11, because it has got no TPM in it, so I started to think, what
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display should I put on it?
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Well, my wife isn't very tech savvy, but once she knows how work flows, she's fired.
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I saw KDE with my first op, might be the best too much, and a bit overwhelming for her.
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Her name felt a bit too different, because I don't think she would get on well with the
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Mac kind of way of doing things.
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I don't think the standard of Bintu setup wouldn't be the right fit either.
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Then I remembered, my friend Kevin from the network maintained the next min, which got
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me thinking it's often recommended for beginners, first I saw, it seemed a bit basic for someone
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like me, and I wondered why I would like to run the next min, but then I realised I should
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put something I'm happy to use to myself, that's why I remembered that I was doing some
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tests with the hibernation couple of months ago, reading some bog boat that the next min worked
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at the book with hibernation.
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There I am, recording the episode.
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On my laptop, running later for the next min, with the chimera desktop.
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My current laptop is the think pad X, Y, carbon, they've been to Gen, i7 with 16KG, and
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the 4K touch screen, I swapped out my SSD with my Windows 1, I put a new one in, but
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at the vent I started a live session, and saw the next min onto the cryptid, so I'd gone
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to the cryptid luck partition with an LVM disk.
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Within 50 minutes, I had a fresh install up and running, the first thing I wanted to
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check was with hibernation and deep sleep worked, deep sleep is a power saving state, where
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you can close a laptop lid, the system save it state to RAM, while most components power
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down is a life of significant power saving and the fast wake up time.
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There's two sleeping modes, in the next, S2 idle, suspend idle, and deep suspend to RAM.
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S2 idle is always available, but the deep one depends on your hardware, I wanted to
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check quick sleep mode was enabled on my laptop, so I ran cat, space, 4x6, 4x4, 4x6
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mem underscore sleep, and those that deep wasn't in the list, after a bit of research, I
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found out that I'd often need to enable deep sleep in the bias, and this is a specific
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setting for this as well, I rebooted into my bias, enabled into the next setting, and
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rebooted by machine, once I did that, deep appeared my list again when I run that
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command, but it had bracket around it, I ran it S2 idle, but you needed to have the
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brackets ran, the deep to make the work, so I ran the command echo space deep, greater
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than space, 4x6, 4x4, 4x6 mem underscore sleep, it was then enabled with the name, but
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I'll put links to that in the show note of those commands, so I really wanted to test
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out how well deep sleep and hibernation worked on my laptop, I closed the lid and put it
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to sleep, when I opened up again, it woke up instantly right where I left off, I had
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to add to enter my password, and everything was fine, after overnight I shut down the
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lid, and it went to sleep, next when I powered up next morning, only left was 5%, it lost
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only 5% charge, next I wanted to see what happened, if the battery got low when I still had
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things open, would a laptop go into hibernation, hibernation of the mobile, instead of shutting
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down the laptop, it says it's shutting down the laptop, the laptop says everything
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in the running in a ram to file on a disc or to a swap partition, then the laptop powers
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off completely, so there's no battery train, when you turn it back on it loads everything
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from that file or partition back into ram, and you're right where you left off, it does
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take a bit long to be up compared to waking up from the deep sleep, but it's a great
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option if you need to stay power or leave your laptop unplug for a while, since I'm running
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and I quit the hard disk, I had to enter a password every time I left off bits, which
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makes things a bit more complicated, if you want to use hibernation, you need to swap
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file or a partition, a swap partition, when I set up the next minute it created a
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2G white swap partition you might before, but the recommendation you have the swap space
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to twice double sides of your ram, because of my, because my system is using LVM and
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encrypted duct volume, I followed the guide which I cleaned in the show notes, to boot
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the laptop using a live CD, live I, so even, and my own was in the next minute, I carefully
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mounted the encrypted duct partition, LVM, it could see it, and I ran a couple of commands
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to shrink the main volume and expand the swap partition, after a reboot I had a 32 gig
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port partition which is perfect for hibernation, which involves updating the graph file, you also
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need to name a hibernation button in the shutdown menu, once I did that the option appeared,
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so I selected the hibernation, on the screen I always screen went blank and the laptop
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powered off, when I pressed the power button, the laptop booted back up, asked and asked
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my disk for the encryption fast rate, I then brought it to an important lock screen,
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after the password I was right back to where I left it off, over the next week I used
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the laptop, daily without charging it, just shutting it in when I was done, when the
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battery finally dropped to 510, I close the laptop that night, and I also went in, I
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closed the lid that night, and the laptop automatically went hibernation overnight, next
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day I plugged it back in, booted it up, it right away, and again it booted up again, asked
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my encryption password, and I was back, and I was back to where I was before, the first
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thing I do, when I start customisation, when I, with the next mint, as I went to the bottom
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panel, I made it a bit smaller, I like how the apps appear, along the bottom night they
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do in Windows, to start, when you look, good, I don't know what that actually called
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in the ink spent, and the search feature works well, I can find things easy, that pack support
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is included out of the box, while snap is disabled by default, which is which type of
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versions I'm not a fan of snap anyway, I saw the few essentials, like VS code and quake,
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quake is a top down terminal, you can access by pressing S12, it pops down from the top,
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you can run your commands, press S12 and it'll hide away, but it'll still be running
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in the background. I've also set up DiLoad, a clipboard manager, but had to add a tentaking
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set up, so it would show up properly in a state bar, because I got double, if not, I changed
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the matter pointer from the large white one to a smaller black, triangular style, where
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I would type a fur, I also saw the Dacity and VLC using flatback, and everything works
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smoothly. I also have Microsoft Edge installed, because it has worked best for the office,
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freezing to apps I need to use, I'm still using official ones off repositories, and
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update for Edge showed up right in the Linux Mint update manager. I like having an update
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manager icon down by the time shows you have updates. I like setting up key bindings to
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quickly launch certain apps, which is something I always find not easy to do in Windows. On
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X-Winch, you do use the keyboard setup, there are also tutorial cuts for tiling on
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tapping Windows to the side screen, plus you get virtual desktops for all of your workspaces.
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Quite well. So I've got everything working hard, I like it, and I've really impressed
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after running the X-Winch for a week, all the key buttons work. I like the key to adjust
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the brightness, one thing I'll say so is a battery life, I know it's never going to
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be much to a MacBook with an M series processor, but I do like a good thinkpad. I current X-1,
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which is recording this on, gets about 2-3 hours of battery life. It has a 47-hour battery,
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but about 90% health, but because it's got 4k set of screen, it doesn't last long. So
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I spent a lot of time on the thinkpad separate, trying to find out which model is the best
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battery life. Recently, I've been found out that the T4S Gen 2 would AMD to business class
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laptop with a 14-inch screen, and the S means it gets a larger battery compared to a
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version. People say it can get 8-10 hours of battery life. I've been watching one on
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the eBay, and they have come, they haven't come very often, but I found one this week with
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16 year RAM and it went for $260. It should arrive soon, so my plan is to store the next
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mint on it and see how the battery life compares. I've also been looking at plans to check out
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for these years to monitor battery life and performance. This is it this episode, I'm
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still looking for a cave host, as I think it would be great to bow and tie tears off from
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someone else. If you're interested, leave a comment on the show or find my email on the
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host page. See you tomorrow for another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio, as Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's
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show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
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broadcast, you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the Internet Archive
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and our Sync.net. On the Sadois status, today's show is released on our Creative Commons
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and Extribution 4.0 International License.
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