So I finally decided to join my university Linux group, and as I been helping people with simple problems in discord for a while they put me in the helpdesk.

All fine and dandy, but other than dual boot and partitioning problems that I had to deal with myself (stupid laptop which does no follow efibootmgr order) I don’t know much about other kinds of troubleshooting.

Is there some reads or free online courses that u guys would recommend.

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idk how people do this.

  1. I try using linux.
  2. I try playing games.
  3. it says “bad platform” and closes.

like what do you do? force the emulation harder?

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7 points

I’ve never seen an error that just says “bad platform”.

Fixing computer problems is essentially just being good at searching for stuff related to your problem. For example in your problem it would just be googling “Linux bad platform ≤name of game>” and guaranteed someone else has had the same problem and either them or someone else has figured out a fix for it. You then apply that fix, if that doesn’t work, try the next result. If it gives you a new problem, rinse and repeat.

Look up the XKCD comic about fixing a computer, that’s literally how we do it. My dad asked me a similar question to yours, I literally printed out the comic and taped it next to the computer and said “this is what I do”.

About 2 years ago (I’ve been working from home for the past 3 years, a week here or there was spent at my parents), years after I had printed out that comic, he said “I just realized that your job is essentially knowing how to look for the information you need and how to apply it when you find it”. He’s an electrician, so not really the same set of skills haha.

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Thanks, I was too lazy to look it up.

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yeah, you’re right. The magic for me is when you dealt so much with this that you just know common errors (like reading java errors). And the bad part is when the google it part doesn’t work.

like recently I figured out that my mouse sends different packets wired and wireless. long story short wireless works bad. And I only found one source, that led to another([1], [2], [3]) but got to lazy caz I just plug my mouse in and the problem is gone, lol

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2 points

Yeah, you run into common (or uncommon but repeatable) errors often that you’re either like “I know exactly how to handle this” or “I remember running into this before but just need to jog my memory real quick…”

I had a similar odd issue with my HDDs. I had 20 HDDs in my system of various ages, and they would seemingly randomly throw shit tons of R/W checksum errors and drop out of its assigned zpool. It was almost never the same drive. SMART said the drive was perfectly fine. It would happen on brand new drives I got a week ago and drives that were years old. I swapped power cables, SATA/SAS controllers (three different HBAs and 3 onboard controllers) and cables, bought a UPS, etc… and nothing seemed to work. I didn’t think it was a PSU issue since I had a 1.5 KW PSU and my Kill-A-Watt meter was only showing about 600w at full load. This took literal months of troubleshooting. Someone on Reddit finally suggested trying another PSU or limiting the amount of drives attached to the PSU. I bought a cheap 400w PSU and connected about 8 drives to that… and all the errors stopped.

It turns out that there wasn’t enough power supplied on the 5v rails to write the data without errors 100% of the time, but it had enough power supplied on the 12v rail to spin all the motors. First time in 25 years I’d ever seen that, but that was also the first time I’ve ever had like 20 drives connected to one PSU. I was literally about to throw in the towel because drives dropped out on a daily basis, but after like 2 or 3 total dropped no more usually failed.

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