– Speakers (0€): cheap logitech speakers that I don’t really use.
The Linux laptop is plugged into one the left screens and the Windows desktop is plugged the other one.
I use them with Barrier mouse and keyboard sharing software that work like passing the mouse from a screen to another and shares clipboard with both machines.
The sound comes out of the soundboard that is plugged into the Windows machine, in which I plug the sound output of my laptop into the mic input of the soundboard and use the inbuilt preamp to have in-real-time sound from both computers.
I have a shared network folder that I use to transfer files from one computer to another.
I use the Linux laptop for computer science studies and programming, and the Windows dekstop for video games and music producing.
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Windows desktop (600€):
– Windows 10
– 1TB SSD NVME & 2TB HDD for storage
– Intel Core i5 10th generation processor
– NVIDIA GT1030 graphics card (shitty)
– 16GB RAM DDR4 (Corsair)
Debian laptop (520€):
– Debian 12 with GNOME 43
– 512GB SSD NVME for storage
– Intel Core i5 12th generation processor
– Intel Iris Xe Graphics graphics chip (actually better than the desktop GPU)
– 16GB RAM DDR4
Peripherals :
– Screens (50€ both used): 2 AOC 22″ Screens
– Keyboard (70€): Logitech G413 SE mechanical keyboard
– Mice (20€ each): Corsair Katar Pro Wireless & Cherry vertical mouse (also wireless)
– Headphones (150€) : Audio Technica ATH M50X
– Speakers (0€): cheap logitech speakers that I don’t really use.
The Linux laptop is plugged into one the left screens and the Windows desktop is plugged the other one.
I use them with Barrier mouse and keyboard sharing software that work like passing the mouse from a screen to another and shares clipboard with both machines.
The sound comes out of the soundboard that is plugged into the Windows machine, in which I plug the sound output of my laptop into the mic input of the soundboard and use the inbuilt preamp to have in-real-time sound from both computers.
I have a shared network folder that I use to transfer files from one computer to another.
I use the Linux laptop for computer science studies and programming, and the Windows dekstop for video games and music producing.