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by Spivak
1818 days ago
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Oh it’s 100% a Linux problem. You can’t just be like “well driver support for this hardware is bad” and throw up your hands. It might be spiritually the manufacturer’s fault but the end user will never care. The fact that there’s no way for non-technical users to figure out if a given hardware configuration will actually work for them makes it a non-starter, especially when the spectrum isn’t “works perfectly” or “fails catastrophically” but the frustrating middle where it kinda works but not always. Suspend might work on Tuesday, multi-monitor will fail with this dongle but not this one. Nvidia Optimus will only work three times ever and you can’t turn off the dedicated GPU to save power or pass it through to a VM because of how it’s wired. Fedora is my daily driver but I would never suggest that it’s as easy as “oh just install Fedora” when I had to painstakingly research every piece of hardware in my laptop to see what the support was like. |
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There is: Buy a computer with preinstalled Linux. I did and it works. You can later install another Linux flavor and it will work, too. Even Qubes OS works for me with reliable suspend and WiFi.
> You can’t just be like “well driver support for this hardware is bad” and throw up your hands. It might be spiritually the manufacturer’s fault but the end user will never care.
Would you also complain if your Windows installation doesn't work reliably on a Macbook? This is a user's fault if they are trying to use the device in an unintended way. Although the Linux community is trying to support everything, this is practically impossible.