How can I brick my laptop's GPU through software without any collateral damage?

How can I brick my laptop's GPU through software without any collateral damage?

install gentoo

Why would you?

delete system32

Prevent binge gaming.

Buy an nvidia card and wait about 6 months

Remove fan

Start furmark

Rinse and repeat

>laptop

This will solve it.

Delete games, install Linux.
Also stop being a lazy piece of shit and just don't touch your games.

You don't know how to take it apart and remove the fan? Most laptops allow you to do that.

If you can't for some reason then just smother all the vents with blankets or some shit and do the same thing

Can a nigger not make his life easier?
What's a good alternative to visual studio on linux?

Sounds like you have a self control problem.

That'll RIP my CPU as well.
True

No your cpu will be fine as long as you don't do anything CPU intense while it's going nuclear

Hmm something like Furmark, or what would you recommend?

Atom, vim, sublime text, emacs.
All of those are text editors but you can make them do everything vs does.

Ah, thanks. What's the most regularly updated and supported one?

underrated post

Furmark is fine

Any GPU benchmark should be good. They are all designed to minimize CPU bottlenecks

If I burn my dedicated GPU, will my laptop display still run fine on intel HD?

For C#: Visual Studio Code, Monodevelop/Xamarin, or JetBrains new C# IDE: Rider (I'm very pleased with it desu).

For C++: CodeBlocks or expensive CLion. Eclipse works, but it's shit at times.

You could also use Atom or glorious Vim and add some plugins to turn them into a fully operational IDEs.

kek

Thanks. Do these work on Ubuntu? Is Ubuntu any good?
Please no meme replies.

Possibly

Turn down the fans, run CPU at maximum, wait for GPU to fry itself

Works every time with a MacBook Pro

Ubuntu is currently the most widely used desktop distro so developers usually prioritise it when making new UI software.

Ubuntu works for new users and will serve you loyally. I personally don't use it due to small reasons but for a new users I believe it's the distro of choice (At least that's what I usually recommend). Fedora is also nice for newcomers but mainly servers. Many fellow Sup Forumsentoomen fail to take into account that due to Ubuntu being a "mainstream" distro, it has a big community for whenever you need help. It's also backed by a cooperation which is usually a good thing.

Ah, I see, much obliged.

Just stay away from it if you actually want to learn GNU/Linux.

OP is obviously trying to get his parents to buy him a new laptop, for gaming. No amount of gentoo will save him.

>your computer
I don't believe that for a second

just turn the voltage up to max and run heaven benchmark, this isnt rocket science.