Debian and Fedora. I use Debian on servers and Fedora on my desktop and laptop.
HumanPerson
That is an interesting use case. If I have interpreted your post correctly, you want to boot from a flash drive into a generic default OS or a persistent and encrypted / password protected OS. Doing that on one operating system is quite difficult as far as I know. However, you could dual boot two Fedora installs on one drive (I chose it because it's what I use and I remember that you can set up encryption in the install. You could use whatever.). Basically, flash the installer to the drive you want to use, and to a second drive. Boot into the second drive and flash fedora onto the free space in the first drive, and enable encryption when prompted. The installer is a live boot (at least on the KDE spin) and will functions as the amnesic one. The other will be password protected and remember changes.
After cycling the battery properly the health is showing 91% and has been working well all day. It's almost like fixing the problem was a good idea.
It is under warranty, but there's a slightly higher capacity one I might get instead. Thanks for the explanation for how it could have actually failed.
The battery that has been consistently working fine for several months went from 95 to 40 percent battery health in a day? I'd rather like to meet your dealer; they've got some good stuff.
65w. enough to run a 7600 and an igpu. i set it to performance but returned it to balanced after. what reset process?
no, drains insanely fast. I think it's limiting itself to 43% charge.
also have an arc and I found it better than even amd considering it had easy opencl support.
framework may be worth considering, but definitely expensive considering what you need from it.
I don't pay for piracy, but if I did I'd be glad I could help.
this is simple file permissions, nothing to do with LUKS. The solution should be to access the files as root. You could use the command "Sudo chmod a+rwx /path/to/drive" to set completely accessible file permissions, which is not a best practice typically, but would be fine here since the drive's encrypted.
The monitor's on the other side of the desk. It could be the issue but it doesn't affect my phone or laptop which are closer to the monitor. I will mess around with aluminum foil because that sounds wonderfully janky.
Edit: foil around cable and GPU io fixed it. It is up to about 3/4 of speed with monitor unplugged, which is a massive improvement and perfectly usable. Thanks so much for the suggestion.