this post was submitted on 27 May 2024
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I've installed it on 2 computers recently without problem....
I've had very bad luck trying to ditch windows. I've been through 6 or 7 different distros trying to find one that works properly with my pc. Somehow I've landed on open suse? That one seems to be cooperating, for the most part, for now. This whole experience has really showed me that Linux doesn't "just work" for normal people though, and anyone who is adamant about that doesn't understand the general populations capabilities.
The general populous would have no clue how to install Windows either, which can, to this day, still have driver issues.
The issue isn’t Linux. The issue is OEMs’ reluctance to provide hardware with Linux preinstalled. The moment Best Buy sells computers with Linux on it is the moment we’re done having this debate.
What kind of issues are you facing?
Do you have exotic hardware? Like high refresh rate monitors?
I went through Ubuntu, Nobara, manjaro, mint, pop, Ubuntu again, and landed on open suse. I have no exotic hardware. My biggest issue was the pc going into hibernate and then never coming back. The secondary issue was getting certain games on steam to work and an Xbox controller. I seem to have all of that licked with suse and some tinkering. The battle I'm having now is when the pc goes to sleep/hibernate/whatever sometimes it completely forgets it's monitor settings and I have to turn the second monitor back on and then change them from 200% back to 100%. Which I thought I had solved by messing with the monitors.config file but I guess not...
Asus rog m16 laptop if that helps any.
I would hardly consider high refresh rate monitors to be exotic. They're quite common.
I wonder what distros they tried though. Considering this is a thread on Nobara I wouldn't be surprised if they had issues with the variety of gaming distros available