I'm a bit speechless right now. I've disabled PBO and didn't have a single crash since then, everything's been running fine for hours. Just to make sure that this really was the issue, I've enabled PBO again - but still haven't experienced any crashes in the last hours. I have no idea how simply disabling and then enabling the feature again fixed my issue, but for now it seems like all is well.
Do you have any explanation for this weird behavior?
Anyway, thank you very much for your suggestion, looks like this actually did the trick!
Motherboard firmware is up-to-date, and I've already tried disabling XMP. I'll give disabling PBO a try, thanks!
I don't necessarily have to run at 3200MHz, if it means that the system is finally stable. But since it's already crashing at the default 2133MHz, I suppose there's no use in playing with the voltages?
Hm, I've had this problem since my initial setup about 2-3 months ago, I think that if there's something wrong with the software in the repos, it would've been fixed by now and I wouldn't be the only one having this problem, right?
But of course, if you want I can give the testing repos a try :)
Yeah, many OEM manufacturers wanted to jump onto the „Vista-compatible“ train and installed it on their low-end hardware, even though they shouldn’t have. This probably also played a big part in why Vista was considered bad.
Vista wasn't actually a bad OS, it just got a bad reputation pretty fast because it had higher hardware requirements than XP and most people didn't have decent enough hardware for a smooth experience. That in combination with the new UAC feature that most people thought was annoying drove people away pretty fast, although the OS itself wasn't bad - in fact, it's pretty similar to Windows 7.
I also switched to Arch about a month ago, and I've been so surprised at how easy gaming on Linux has become. Even some games that use AntiCheat like Apex Legends run absolutely great.
I had to switch to X11 though, but that's the fault of NVIDIA because the drivers are still causing problems on Wayland.
Yeah, it finally feels like a mobile app that you can use without having to know the layout of the desktop version first. A friend of mine that never used the desktop app really struggled with basic tasks on the old mobile app.
There's not really any benefit of running Manjaro over Arch, it will only introduce problems over time. If you want a "pre-configured" Arch with a nice installer, go for EndeavourOS, it's great!
I'm not sure, here's the entire dmesg output: https://pastebin.com/MZfhB0xK