Quote from: Goberman on August 08, 2024, 12:04:51GeorgeS, you've expected all drivers for everything in the world to be included? Windows also doesn't do that.
Well no and yes.
Most major OEM's submit their drivers to MS and HWQL and upon installing a MS OS the system will reach out to the MS driver Archive for any driver that might be missing in the install media.
So, no not all drivers/hardware might get drivers right at first but that is usually quickly rectified.
The other MAJOR problem with 'Linux' is whatever distro your using might not have a COMPLETE dependency tree for all the applications listed in the package & software managers but were not included in the distro.
So while attempting to load Linux on 3 different machines recently:
- one was limited to 32bit distro's and not all listed additional applications (even the 'package manager' claimed IT had a update that it could never resolve)
- 2nd box I tried 3 different distro's and finally settled on one that CAME WITH the featured applications I needed/wanted as the 1st 2 distro's had broken dependency trees for them
- 3rd box (taking notes from experience I had with the 1st two) I found one distro that advertised BOTH the applications AND GPU driver package I needed for it before installing
Last but not least the Linux distro that I'm going to play games on, while Steam lists MOST of my games library (>50 individual games) as "tested and validated on Steam Deck" only a SMALL FRACTION of them were "installable" (IE: Green Install icon on the Steam client).
Sadly while testing "Cyberpunk 2077" on 2 WINBOX's and 1 newly loaded Linux box I got:
- Best WIN10 GTX1070
- Can be good enough WIN10 GTX1650
- Barely playable Linux GTX1060
To conclude: Linux is not exactly 'plug & play' with hardware or software however one might be able to get a higher percentage of things working if your willing to tinker/tweak the OS/drivers & applications.