Comment by 999900000999
1 day ago
Linux is great if you win the hardware support lottery.
I've had several laptops where audio just doesn't work even on rolling releases. Or the screen freezing up constantly.
This was all with relatively new hardware within the last year or so.
My issue with the Linux community is if you bring this up it's all of a sudden the fault of everyone but Linux.
The end user should of picked better hardware.
The hardware OEMs should of shipped Linux support.
The end user is lazy for not installing an RC kernel.
Macs are great, but my current workhorse computer has a 2TB SSD, and only cost 550$ with the SSD upgrade.
Vs 2000$ for the cheapest MacBook with a 2TB SSD
You don't have to win the hardware support lottery if you do a bit of research or buy a laptop made for it.
>or buy a laptop made for it.
Which is usually at least 2x as much if we're talking about buying a System 76 laptop.
Windows laptops go on sale very often.
Although I will admit I have an HP laptop I brought last December that worked out of the box with Ubuntu. Nvidia drivers and all.
> Linux is great if you win the hardware support lottery.
This is fairly easy to do by just not buying the absolute latest hardware. Installing something like Fedora in a 8-12 month old laptop I just can't recall last time I had issues.
I've had plenty of issues on ~2y old hardware too. Does your laptop sleep properly, do the fans scale properly, do wireless chips like Bluetooth and wifi work right, does audio (incl over BT) work, and does it switch between graphics cards if applicable?
To be fair Windows also can't sleep properly.
How exactly would a new Linux user know this ?
What happens when they install Ubuntu and the Wifi doesn't even work ? An experienced Linux user might figure it out.
A new user would, very reasonably, assume Linux doesn't work and reinstall Windows.
> How exactly would a new Linux user know this ?
It's easy: whatever is preinstalled will be guaranteed to work reliably. Worked for me.
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