Comment by trelane

2 years ago

I you stop trying to play armchair systems integrator and instead buy computers with Linux preinstalled fully supported by the vendor, you'll have a much better time of it.

Modern hardware is complex enough that it supports Windows or Linux. Not both, though.

So I thought when I bought my Asus 1215B netbook (remember those?), and had my share of headaches related to the 3D support (when AMD drivers got rebooted), video acceleration (still doesn't work), and a wlan driver that keeps losing connections to my home router, forcing me to use a LAN cable instead.

Ah, and rebooting occasionally requires taking the battery off as workaround to take it out of an UEFI zombie state.

  • Did you call their support to get it fixed? I'm guessing you didn't, since the 1215B didn't ship with Linux, according to Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asus_Eee_PC

    Interestingly, I had a few of the earlier models that did (701, 901 iirc) and their support for Linux was great. Certainly light years ahead of my efforts to put Linux in a Dell a few years prior.

    • Typical Linux fan answer on the Internet, apparently Wikipedia knows better than me, having bought it.

      Not only it shipped with a custom Asus distribution for media play called Linux Express, it had Ubuntu on it.

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