There are a few open source game projects I follow. I suppose the most famous one is the Freespace 2 source code project. Although it didn’t start open source, the original devs open-sourced it later. It has great support, and a great modding launcher called Knossos. To play the game, even with the source code, you either need the original disks or a copy of the installer from GoG, but it’s really cheap. Getting it working on Windows is pretty easy, but Linux is only slightly more complicated. (Fortunately, there’s a new launcher that makes it way easier).
If you’re interested, let me know.
I’ve been using Ubuntu for a while now, and was planning for my new build (Within the next week or two) to try out PopOS (Which is still based off of Ubuntu).
If I was more familiar with Fedora, I might have tried out Nobara, (but it doesn’t have the support that PopOS does yet).
And considering you use Nvidia, I’ve read that PopOS makes it easier to get drivers for that. If you’re still new, either PopOS or base Ubuntu would work, but PopOS might get you set up faster. I wish I could give a more detailed answer.
I have a lot of PCs for different purposes, so this answer could probably be considered cheating. It really depends on what I am doing. I’ll go in order of Highest usage to Least usage, and separate professional usage and personal usage.
Personal
Professional
I’m not going to list every computer here, so I’ll just categorize them by purpose.
I personally find Operating Systems to be situational. I wouldn’t say one is really better than the other. However, I’ve been moving away from Windows for personal use lately, as I’ve been getting more and more frustrated with the overall user experience. I know that custom shells for Windows exist, but I don’t know how good of an idea it is to use them.
I am trying it out just to understand it’s nuances. I think the concept is solid, but I feel like the federated part could use a little more work so it’s more possible to use whatever lemmy instance you prefer. Signing up on any particular instance is fine (Though I wish it had more options), but if I cannot get onto an instance that I prefer, it’s tricky to curate my experience.
That being said, I think it is a fixable problem, and I have ideas to fix that based upon other websites I’ve used, but I have no idea where to submit them.
Admittedly, I have not used AI, but that probably would be overwhelming compared to everything else you have listed so far. (In other words, the time spent learning it would overshadow the amount of gain you would have from it)
But I believe everything else you’ve mentioned is probably achievable, even if it’s not all at once. I do not use those social media sites, so I don’t have an immediate answer, but I can assist in thinking about the problem. (Programming is all about solving problems you don’t know how to solve yet) It’s also iterative, you don’t have to have a complete solution to make your life a lot easier.
Let me ask some questions that may help:
It’s always good to break your problem down into smaller problems first, and then solve each small problem, one at a time.
Let me know if that helps, and feel free to provide more details.
edit: grammar