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dannyfritz07 a day ago

Let's not get ahead of ourselves here. 15 years ago I was still looking up installation and driver procedures and workarounds to install Linux on my devices. I failed to install arch in college because I didn't have a driver for my SATA drive for example.

Today though. Yeah totally easy. Especially if you get one of the many machines with Linux support. Smooth sailing all around.

noAnswer 18 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Facetiously: Well actually, you didn't need a driver for the SATA drive but the SATA controller.

Something that was also true for Windows and such a common problem that many BIOSes would offer a IDE compatibility mode one could switch to.

26 years ago I installed SUSE and it just worked on my self build PC. Smooth sailing all around. Than I tried Debian and couldn't for the life of me get X11 to work.

So yeah, the distro and hardware lottery is still a problem.

mixmastamyk 20 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Windows has also needed external drivers installed at times, since the DOS days. It's the nature of obscure, new, or advanced hardware.

Kye 3 hours ago | parent [-]

The difference was the device came with a disk containing the driver for DOS and Windows.

jacquesm 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I don't see how that is Linux' fault.

Kye 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I didn't say it was. This discussion is about relative difficulty of setting things up. It is, objectively, more difficult when you need to download a driver for new hardware and the NIC on your laptop needs a driver your distro didn't come with.