Sadly I was never able to watch this famed stability...
Sadly I was never able to watch this famed stability...
Posted Feb 20, 2009 7:17 UTC (Fri) by ekj (guest, #1524)In reply to: Sadly I was never able to watch this famed stability... by dlang
Parent article: Debian 5.0 released
Yes, sure, you can still get unlucky. And even if you're not "unlucky" it may well be that some feature of your new hardware isn't supported completely.
Still, the last few years I've several times installed ubuntu on bog-standard new laptops, not spesifically bought for ubuntu or investigated for ubuntu, and nevertheless had them "just work", right out of the box. No tweaking needed, no extra drivers or changing to "unstable" or anything of the sort needed.
Insert Live-cd (good way of testing driver-support), wait for 2-3 minutes, test hardware, everything works.
Notice, I've used Linux since I once installed Slackware from a set of floppies, running the 1.2.13 kernel. I've compiled my own kernel hundreds of times, and am familiar with atleast a dozen distributions. I don't have a problem dealing with needing a custom install-kernel or running unstable.
But get this: I also have no DESIRE to do so. When there's a choice not to, and instead use the laptop for what I bought it for, I know what my choice is gonna be.
For beginners, the choice is even more obvious. Given a choice between "Debian would work with your hardware, if you would just X, Y and Z" on the one hand and "Ubuntu works with your hardware." on the other hand, it's not even really a choice, for most beginners.
