Maybe it’s because I was last into linux more heavily 10+ years ago. But I am amazed at how distros work now. 15 year old wifi adapter that originally came with cd based drivers? Works perfectly without anything extra. Racing wheel i got on ebay? Works perfectly. Mouse, keyboard, tartarus, no issue. I am just very happy with how well linux has been working, and hopefully this will bring more people to make the switch. However, I have not had luck with vr (oculus. I hear index does better). Thats the one thing I do hope for more progress on.

  • @[email protected]
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    4527 days ago

    It’s not luck. It’s hard work by a dedicated group of people who make it happen. 🙏

  • @[email protected]
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    726 days ago

    I’ve had zero problems with linux working with any hardware I have.

    But thats mostly because I selected hardware from companies known to have good linux compatability. like AMD, and TPlink

  • @[email protected]
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    627 days ago

    I had that experience yesterday.

    I wanted to see if a old fingerprint reader I bought 6 or 7 years ago would work, wasn’t expecting it to but lo and behold, it was in the fprint documentation as a supported device and once set up, worked without issue.

    The Linux community fucking rules man. So many talented and hard working people make this stuff possible.

  • Rikudou_Sage
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    526 days ago

    Definitely better than Windows lately, which is kinda amusing. Have you tried reinstalling Windows from scratch lately?

    • Ghoelian
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      326 days ago

      A previous laptop I had came with win 11. At first I installed win 10 on it cause I needed that for work, touchpad just would not work. Finding the drivers for win 11 was already almost impossible without installing some shitty device detector program from msi, win 10 versions just did not exist.

      Installed Linux on it eventually, and it worked perfectly out of the box.

  • @[email protected]
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    326 days ago

    yeh years ago, to get Linux working you might need an older computer because the kernels did not catch up yet. Nowadays, I can just buy any new computer and can be sure that 90% of my devices will work with it.

    The only problem now is modern standby. Intel and AMD kept fucking up standby mode on laptops.

  • @[email protected]
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    327 days ago

    I got an old thermal receipt printer, plugged it into the parallel port and echoed some text to /dev/lp0 and it printed. I didn’t have to set anything up. I did have to write a simple python script to make it print images though.

  • @[email protected]
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    227 days ago

    The only hardware I had trouble with was a 3D Connexion Space Pilot. Linux defaults to seeing it as a tablet mouse or track nub, rather than a 6 axis 3D controller. The Linux download from the site did get it working though.

    • Magiilaro
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      227 days ago

      Hopefully devices like that can more easily be implemented with the plugin support for libinput. It sounds like the poster child for it.

    • Max
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      227 days ago

      If you haven’t seen it, the open source driver for 3d connexion stuff is also pretty good, and I believe might be necessary for blender to work with it. It’s also probably packaged in the distro repositories.

      https://github.com/FreeSpacenav/spacenavd

      • @[email protected]
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        227 days ago

        Yes I have used it. A while back, and I had to run the app as root. But yeah, I was setting it up for blender use

  • @[email protected]
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    226 days ago

    I have not had luck with vr (oculus. I hear index does better).

    Which oculus headset do you have? If its a Quest then ALVR is the way to go. The wired only ones dont really work. If you want to see your desktop in vr, then you can use WlxOverlay-S for that.

    • @[email protected]
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      226 days ago

      I’ve been keeping Windows to do VR, I didn’t realize it was working on Linux too. Index, btw

    • @[email protected]OP
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      123 days ago

      Yeah quest 2. I haven’t side loaded it or anything yet as it’s a shared headset with the SO

  • youmaynotknow
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    127 days ago

    I have yet to see the devices that don’t work in Linux (evidently, there are a few, but I’ve never used them, so there’s that).

    • Magiilaro
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      427 days ago

      Oh just try Internal HDMI Capture cards and you will find so many, even most of them, will not work under Linux at all.

      • youmaynotknow
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        126 days ago

        Yeah, I would think so, but again, I’ve never had hardware fail to work out of the box in Linux, and since I don’t use internal capture cards, I guess I will not be affected any time soon.