I may go down that road, but the main push was to remove the almost ten year old platter based magnetic drive. Maybe I'll look into placing the ESP on a flash drive until I have a better solution. Bummer. This secret upgrade to breathe new life into my partner's laptop isn't going well at all.
Thanks for that insight. The hard thing is that getting things from Amazon or other web stores in Central America where I live is not easy. I ordered this drive in November and received it two weeks ago. I was sure it would work, as my G3 laptop came from the factory with a M.2 Kingston drive, so I assumed NVME was a no-brainer.
The real kicker is that this was planned as a gift to my partner who has the same laptop, but with a Toshiba HDD. Boot time >2 min, vs 17s on my SSD, and even faster (theoretically) on this M.2. Sigh... poor prep on my part.
This is the drive I picked up. It's a bog standard tiny M.2 drive that will fit in my laptop.
I have my controller set to AHCI mode. The drive is seen, as I can install MX Linux or Mint to it, but it won't boot. Same with Clonezilla or dd, which can see the drive just fine to copy data to it. The option to boot from PCIe/M.2 is enabled. Toggling it changes nothing in any case.
When I press F9 for boot options after removing the 2.5" SSD, I can see the boot option named as "MX23" or "Mint" (depending on which I've just installed or cloned), but selecting it does nothing, unfortunately.
I think tlp-ui can do this, but only on specific devices. IIRC, you set the charging thresholds in such a way that the battery will not charge. For example, configure to prevent charging until below 40% and as long as the battery is above that threshold, no charging should take place.
However, this likely means that as soon as your device goes to sleep or powers off, the battery begins charging again.
Which version, pro or tube? My 2015 pro is a champ, including in Kodi. Adding the Samsung SSD a few years back was a game changer though. Boot time dropped to 7 seconds, and no trouble with h.265 and even 1080 AV1.
Edit: To OP, I currently host my files on the shield local drive and watch with Kodi. I used to have a NAS, but am living leaner lately, and local works fine. Can easily move files to it over the network
Aw, man! That's great that you're back in business! I'm chuffed that you get to go down memory lane like this now. Music=culture=who we are and shouldn't be controlled like in the digital age bastardization of copyright.
I currently use strawberry on my PC for most music, and still am searching for a FOSS android app. I thought it was Mucke, but it doesn't see more than half my tracks for some reason.
Your music is likely still there if you grab it with Takeout. Mine was. The only problem: one flat folder. I spent weeks with Picard working out which tracks where what by title and acoustic ID. So, not great, but I got back my own music files for some things I'd forgotten completely.
I prefer the deb that works. I get a signal.update almost every other day. I don't remember to update my flatpaks anywhere near that often. I also appreciate that it doesn't force me to include dependencies that are already met.
My SO was skeptical from the start, but when they sent an email from an impressively obfuscated email address, that was the end. The alias had over 100 characters including specials, and the domain was the same.
I may go down that road, but the main push was to remove the almost ten year old platter based magnetic drive. Maybe I'll look into placing the ESP on a flash drive until I have a better solution. Bummer. This secret upgrade to breathe new life into my partner's laptop isn't going well at all.