Comment by WD-42
12 hours ago
You are using a distro that is generally very behind on software versions and doesn’t bundle non free software (Debian) on a laptop with brand new hardware. Additionally, you are running a DE (cinnamon) which is really designed for a specific distro (Mint) which you are not using.
If you want stuff to just work you might want to try using a more up to date distro with a mainstream desktop. Stock Ubuntu or Fedora would probably work fine for you.
debian 13 is using kernel 6.12 vs ubuntu 24 6.14. I don't think it's a kernel issue, and more that amd drivers aren't there yet for the new hardware.
running the latest also is problematic, i.e. a new kernel upgrade that blows thing up.
and that's the main difference between linux and windows, windows just works, osx just works, linux is a minefield of different quirks.
The amd drivers might not there, and they will continue to not be there on the version of the kernel you are using and choosing to be stuck on by using Debian. Drivers are part of the kernel in Linux, it’s not how windows works. Ubuntu and Fedora are not unstable, you are just choosing pain for yourself.
>Drivers are part of the kernel in Linux
While the drivers at the runtime are part of the kernel, they are not distributed as part of the kernel.
My drivers are *latest* -> 6.16.6.30200100-2255209.24.04
https://instinct.docs.amd.com/projects/amdgpu-docs/en/latest...
Debian is *stable*, but you are so far only proving my point in my original post.
If you are going to download ubuntu, the version proposed is 24.04 that has older kernel version than my debian 13.
https://ubuntu.com/download/desktop -> Ubuntu 24.04.3 LTS -> Kernel 6.8
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