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Hi grindstone! Right now I only have DSL installed in VMware Workstation Pro where it never has been any trouble with the sound. I'm actually listening on a playlist on youtube as I write this. I'm reluctant to install Qemu on this machine again. Made a fresh install of Windows 11 today to get rid of some garbage that had been collected. So now I think at least twice before installing anything directly in windows. I only get 1280x768 in resolution on the installed DSL. I opted for the alpha2 and it works fine. Checked the Control Centre in DSL and the highest resolution awailable is 1280x768 so it can't be changed that way either. In some other distros it was just to choose the resolution after installation. I'm using DSL as my preferred work environment since the tools I use works well. Thanks again grindstone!
// meo
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I have tried it several times but it doesn't work so well with my wireless keyboard and mouse. Have tried not to leave any stone unturned trying out DSL-2024.
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Thanks Dbohdan. I have experimented with Zstandard compression too. It does seem advantageous, but as DSL sits right now it is just slightly too big to get onto a single CD using it. For USBs and VMs I think lz4 makes sense because it is still faster to decompress than Zstandard and in those applications the increased size isn't really important. If I manage to trim down DSL a bit more and get the room inside 700mb it would be nice to offer Zstandard compression instead of xz.
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Nice testing, thank you! You are right, there doesn't seem to be much notable difference in the zst and lz4 boot times. Food for thought for sure! If I could trim away more space it would be really great to squeeze a Zstandard iso into 700MB. That would definitely improve the live CD experience.
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I have a thought re. the potential improved experience for Live CDs .. would the difference actually be that significant if booted from an old CD-ROM unit?
I'm thinking the read-out time would still be ~2½ minutes even with a fast unit averaging something like 30x read speed over the whole disc .. which I think is rather pushing the limits of the technology.
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Wow, this is a great question. Let's assume it's like an old Core 2 Duo E6420 @ about 2GHz with 2GB RAM, or, something even older like a P4 with 1G of ram. I'd have to think in those cases the overhead of decompressing is the biggest factor for booting from CD than the speed of the CD Rom drive. I really would test this out though.