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« Last post by sorveltaja on December 31, 2025, 07:07:43 PM »
It really is a jungle of all kinds of possible and impossible options, no matter if it's Linux or Windows.
But yeah, enabling 32-bit repository is one of the first steps in the Wine installation instructions mentioned before: sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
General stories and gripes ahead:
Must have Win apps that I use with Wine are ancient Paint Shop Pro 8, and Goldwave.
I'd use Winamp too, but it's rather quirky to use with Wine. Sudden crashes and whatnot. I've always used it in its basic form (since Win 2000), without any fancy visualizations.
Winamp is probably the only music player that has a working plugin to re-connect to the network stream, when it cuts out. It's called 'silence detector'.
On to the alternatives. Although VLC has 'Auto re-connect' option in its preferences, it doesn't work the way one might expect, if at all. After trying some bash scripts found on the net, (and even ones produced by the infamous ChatGPT) to fix the problem, none of them worked. Got to love the dead air.
Qmmp, Audacious, and bunch of other players don't seem to have that function either.
Anyway, then I thought, that how about looking, what's happening when the stream cuts off. Wireshark is a free tool that I used back when testing Win10 to see where it sends telemetry data. If memory serves, there were tutorials of how to do that.
When using it in this case, I got some indications, when the net radio stream cuts or drops, but can't figure out what to do with that data.
So, I have a habit of jumping to the deep end of the pool, even though I can barely swim [ You are not allowed to view this attachment ] .
In that vein, another example: trying to make GPU (display card) passthrough, so that the VM has a real hardware resources (3D acceleration for apps like Rhinoceros that I've used quite a lot on Windows), instead of virtual ones. It may be possible using single GPU, but it's really not that convenient to use - shut down the primary host display service/device, so that VM can use it.
I insisted on testing that procedure anyway, and since such things can't, for obvious reasons, be tested inside VM, I ended up bricking the Linux installation on my pc.
More viable option would be to have two GPU's, perhaps just an integrated one for the host, and dedicated one for VM. However, my motherboard or CPU don't have integrated GPU's, so that's the end of the story about that, for now.