[citation][nom]back_by_demand[/nom]Why should a commercial organisation, such as a motherboard vendor, go out of their way to support an OS that does nothing to provide any capital input?This is not Linux vs Windows.When Linux pays money into the IT industry it can ask for whatever it wants, until then it can't complain because it has had a free ride so far.[/citation]
That's right. Microsoft pays Intel, nVidia, AMD and others to make sure everything is compatible, and that makes sense. So does Apple. Linux doesn't, hence half-assed support for all the new hardware.
I wonder, are all these hours of "open source enthusiasts" coding their own drivers instead of using the manufacturer's ones worth it? :lol:
[citation][nom]nordlead[/nom]I re-purpose discarded computers and laptops (mostly from DELL) for people who can't afford new PCs, but need a word processor and an internet connection. In 10 years I'll be doing it with i7's and whatever else is bleeding edge now. I am savvy enough to not buy prebuilt but I still use them.EDIT: I'll also say that as much as I love Windows, Microsoft needs to fix the problem of malicious code running in Windows before they fix a problem that doesn't even exist.[/citation]
As much as I think your work benefits the people, I'm sorry to say, but the IT industry doesn't care where modern laptops will end up in ten years.