• Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    The difference is that if you’re using hardware that’s compatible it just works. My current experience on Linux is that you have 100% hardware that’s supported based on what people are saying, you install one distro and your GPU shits the bed the second there’s load on it and WiFi works when it feels like it. Install another distro and the GPU works but WiFi doesn’t. In the end you spend hours troubleshooting and you’re applying solutions by trusting that people aren’t doing anything malicious when they tell you to input such and such in terminal.

    On Windows? Install the OS, everything works, so no, there’s no issues with the hardware itself.

    And the “small subset” of hardware it supports is anything made after 2017 and it’s only Windows 11 that doesn’t support hardware made before that.

    Try to make Linux work without any outside intervention with all the hardware that Windows 11 is just compatible with out of the box, I dare you.

    • SapphironZA@sh.itjust.works
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      4 hours ago

      That “small subset” is hundreds of millions of devices made in the last 5 years alone.

      The problem with Linux (not their fault), is that most of the problems appear in hardware made in the last 3 years.

    • argon@lemmy.today
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      4 hours ago

      Huh, odd. I never had these issues, even though I use an Nvidia card with a VRR monitor. All my peripherals (webcam, printer, bluetooth earbuds) work out of the box, too. But maybe I’m just lucky.