|
|
|
|
|
by sho_hn
1025 days ago
|
|
Linux contains lots of code to work around a myriad of EDID quirks (and loads of other HW quirks), too: https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/master/drivers/gpu/dr... There certainly isn't any big philosophical point to make here, Linux doesn't take a hard stance of expecting correct HW. Ultimately this is a symptom of (1) bugs happen (here, at LG) and (2) Linux has a lower market share and therefore sees less testing. It's certainly fine to say "then I will use Windows to run into statistically fewer problems", so long as you're aware the same argument applies to any entrenched incumbent. As mentioned earlier, it'd have applied to MSIE in 2005 as well. |
|
What's funny is, I was around in 2005 and had already adopted Firefox well before it was called Firefox. (I was also around for the release of IE 4, and spent half a day downloading it on our 56k modem on release day! Exciting times.)
That's because the web is what I work on, and I am OK taking on buggy/beta stuff in the web domain because I learn useful things.
In the OS space, I was a linux user for a decade before I realized that I was wasting tremendous amounts of time and energy debugging stuff very like this monitor issue, and getting no transferable benefit out of it.
I switched to mac at the time, and have experienced vastly less of this sort of configuration nightmare since.
I love linux and I root for it, and occasionally I still try to switch again, before I end up having to figure out this sort of issue that just empirically doesn't exist on my mac, then I get sad and switch back.