From 89d0e45cdf9bcc5c8b1c9a8ab5b38b2273171b00 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: HombreLaser Date: Sat, 8 Nov 2025 22:58:49 -0600 Subject: Improve writing --- _posts/en/2025-11-08-pc_crt_guide.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/_posts/en/2025-11-08-pc_crt_guide.md b/_posts/en/2025-11-08-pc_crt_guide.md index 52e16c4..18e7836 100644 --- a/_posts/en/2025-11-08-pc_crt_guide.md +++ b/_posts/en/2025-11-08-pc_crt_guide.md @@ -107,7 +107,7 @@ with your bootloader and render the other operating systems present in different partitioning your main drive and risking data loss. - Connect the GPU in a different PCIe port, this seems obvious, but I mention it so you can be sure this means you can use your main OS with your more powerful, modern card and use the old, cheap-ass radeon you'll buy exclusively for retro gaming. -- In **every** part of this tutorial where I mention to unplug any other non-analogue port (remember, you'll use the VGA/DVI-I port of your radeon card) I also +- In **every** part of this tutorial where I tell you to unplug any other non-analogue port (remember, you'll use the VGA/DVI-I port of your radeon card) I also mean your other GPU's ports and your motherboard's. You don't want your CRT TV ready operating system to use your nvidia card, believe me. - If you're on windows, tough luck. Every time you want to boot into your retro gaming OS you'll have to get into your BIOS' boot screen/setup menu (something you'd normally do only for installing a new operating system). If you took the red pill and are using a linux distro as the main operating system of your PC, -- cgit v1.2.3