I do it mainly cos it makes managing lots of different environments easy. I can have windows and different Linux distros and different packages and cool shit all from one display manager.
1-2% is the overhead of virtualization. Hardware virtualization is Goated. And QubesOS uses Zen under the hood same as what’s used by aws etc so its well optimised.
Genuinely my first response. What are VMs for?
I run QubesOS BTW. My entire computer is just a bunch of VMs in a trench coat.
Running Qubes as a daily driver is some serious level of privacy enthusiasm
I do it mainly cos it makes managing lots of different environments easy. I can have windows and different Linux distros and different packages and cool shit all from one display manager.
Doesn’t virtualization eat away a lot of performance? Or do you not care much about it?
@Allero Not if it’s hardware-accelerated. You’ll be hard-pressed to find a CPU without hardware virtualization, though.
@muntedcrocodile
1-2% is the overhead of virtualization. Hardware virtualization is Goated. And QubesOS uses Zen under the hood same as what’s used by aws etc so its well optimised.
Nice