Being so impossibly sexy and yet still intimidating for no reason.
Also Wifi support for certain chip sets.
Being so impossibly sexy and yet still intimidating for no reason.
Also Wifi support for certain chip sets.
The wifi/blue tooth chipset for my PC just got skipped over. The version be and after have drivers but for what ever reason meditek just never made a driver for mine. ):
Im not a fan of the severe security issues and just how broken sandboxing is
Suspend , hibernation and resume
yes laptops may seem like they suspend and hibernate and resume properly on Linux. But they do not work reliably. Back in 2010, you could have laptop running hot inside your backpack just because it failed to suspend on lid close. Fast forwars to 2026, the lid close action works but for me, there are still small chances that it doesnt suspend properly or slow to suspend. I blame Intel and Micro$oft for the new standby mode.
As much as I hate Macs, those fucking money grabbers suspend 200% well. I dont care if you're alert or drunk or 30,000 ft in the air, if you close on the lids on these laptops, they suspend quickly.
Oh, that's not just a Linux issue sadly. My company uses Dell Laptops with Win11 as development machines and every single coworker has issues with their laptop overheating in their bag if they don't completely shut it down beforehand (I say completely because if you close it before it's fully shut down, it will still keep running and overheat, fun!)
Second this, hibernation and suspend could use some work.
All my thinkpads seem to have a problem with built-in I/O after waking. Sometimes it can get rather weird, like the buttons above the trackpad stop working but the ones in the trackpad work.
In my experience, the only OS that (usually) suspends when told to do so is mac. Linux and Windows both struggle with it depending on your hardware.
One of the main things I do miss about my MacBook.
I think the main problem lies in the community.
Not everyone, but a few vocal rotten apples are hostile to new users who either:
Don't already know the answer to their own question
Are not using their distro
Didn't immediately read the wiki entry for their exact problem
This kind of gatekeeping is why some people are put off of Linux and the community as a whole. Just because someone asks a question you think is obvious, doesn't mean it's obvious to them.
For number 3, it is only gatekeeping if the person asking for help can't read.
Oh hi it's me. Archwiki and tldr are great, but man pages explain things adequately about 20% of the time.
Many of the Ms we're supposed to R aren't very well written, and we need to be open to explaining how things work in different ways if qe want others to take up with the things we like.
Man pages are the only reference material I know that has more information-free circular definition chains than Wikipedia. And I imagine that it's for much the same reason; they're primarily written and fought over by experts who only need terse reminder notes for themselves, and who can't remember what it was like not spending every day up to their elbows in the subject.
i'd go as far as saying tfm exists for a reason
And Google sucks more and more every day...
There's a good way to point people to existing documentation without being a jackass.
If someone doesn't find the wiki article that answers their question because they didn't know how to ask it with the right keywords, just point them to the wiki article and add any missing context to help the next person out.
A rude "rtfm" response with closing the ticket isn't helpful.
it's expected to tell someone to rtfm politely, but it exists for a reason and we must cultivate a culture of rtfm. the community can be there for more specific advice.
Standby drains the battery surprisingly fast.
People assume it's all terminal all the time. I haven't needed to open the terminal for months. It starts up. With the GUI I open the browser. Maybe steam, too. Do stuff. Shut down.
While this may be true (I really have no idea at this point), terminal is a superpower, pretty much the best option for anything except manually dragging and dropping files one by one.
Nautilus can move groups of numbered files, which is useful for image frames stored separately. But it has bugs. One of them won't let you start a sequential move from any number other than 1. Which is idiotic.
Dolphin can't even do that.
The command line can, easily.
I never use the terminal. It's not necessary for me. I'm not an IT user. I'm not missing out on anything. Many things I do don't even have a terminal command. It's important new users know this if they are not in to IT.
It's useful for any meaningful use of a computer.
That's flat out objective bullshit.
Freedom is overwhelming.
You can change everything and anything... so that means a LOT of choices.
Yep, just choosing a distro can be daunting when you know nothing.
It deprives Apple and Microsoft of revenue. /s
It needs more pre installed machines on the market.
BLUETOOTH
Aha bluetoothctl connect f3:a2:de:e6:b5:a1
Connected
Could not connect
Audio.
And software availability.
pipewire just dissolved all my audio issues ever. could not be happier with it.
I resort to ancient audio hardware with pure ALSA from how bad the modern Linux audio stack has gotten
pipewire is forgivable as it's slowly healing the Linux audio madness
Software compatibility is probably the biggest issue. If someone relies on a piece of software that is Windows or MacOS exclusive, that can be enough of a deal breaker. Open source alternatives may exist, but they do not always have the same features or behave as expected compared to what they are replacing.
In Linux, you can configure everything. And you're will be forced to do it.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
Community icon by Alpár-Etele Méder, licensed under CC BY 3.0