My time with Linux has been equal parts amazing and absolutely infuriating. Linux Mint is NOT usable out of the box. Here have been my issues:

Nvidia GPU - Trying to figure out how to get the drivers working was a nightmare with ten million different people giving different advice on how to get it to work. Eventually I was able to get them signed and it seems to work

Bluetooth - Another nightmare. Bluetooth is terrible on Linux. It took hours to get it even remotely working ok, but I still don’t think it’s perfect.

Compatibility - Some things just straight up don’t work for seemingly no reason. None of my controllers work with Steam, no matter how many countless hours I’ve spent troubleshooting.

And that is where I am disappointed. Troubleshooting Linux issues sucks. There are so many people giving their opinions and all of them are different and most don’t work.

When Linux is working right it is amazing, and I love it. But right now, it just isn’t as good as Windows and extremely infuriating more often than not. Guess I am going to switch back and give Bill Gates all of my info again. Really fucking disappointing

Update: Controllers seem to work after forcing compatibility mode in Steam. No idea why that was off or why Steam was essentially hijacking my controller, but it seems to work now. For everyone that helped thank you.

  • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    Looks like you used hardware that was designed for windows and are blaming it now on Linux.

    I am not understanding the issue you have that requires signing of drivers.

    Yes some Bluetooth devices lack the support from the manufacturer’s for Linux, the Controllers i have used work great, at least for my needs.

    Controllers have better support Linux for ages. Not understanding the issue here either.

    Troubleshooting on Windows sucks at least to the same degree. The same non specific error message gets you 50 possible solutions.

    No need to announce your departure.

    • KSP Atlas@sopuli.xyz
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      13 hours ago

      The reality is, people will be using Linux on Windows hardware, people won’t build special computers just for Linux or buy a premade Linux computer, they’ll flash Linux on their Windows computer expecting it to work and get annoyed if it doesn’t, the person in the post is making very valid points and those issues should be worked on

      • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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        11 hours ago

        I absolutely disagree with you. If a manufacturer does not care about Linux support, it’s on the manufacturer. Do not blame the thousands of unpaid volunteers and a few paid ppl for not supporting a specific BT chip or controller or whatever.

        The signing issue is so on OP cause disabling secure boot or using a supported distro like ubuntu could have fixed that, and yes you can run Windows 11 with Linux dual boot without secure boot.

    • Cold_Brew_Enema@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 day ago

      I’m venting because I don’t understand how the experience is so vastly different for people. And what do you mean hardware designed for windows? Literally the only thing is the NVIDIA gpu

      • LordPassionFruit@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        Not the guy your responding to and I 100% get your frustration, but I want to provide a little anecdote.

        Back in November, I built a new desktop to replace my 7 year old one and put OpenSUSE on it. No matter what I tried, I could not get either Bluetooth or WiFi working. I tried updating drivers, restarting controllers, reinstalling the OS, replacing the OS with Mint. Nothing worked.

        I did a lot of searching over the next few days, and it turned out that my motherboard was so new that it’s built in WiFi chip did not have Linux drivers yet. Like at all.

        Most products aren’t created with Linux in mind, so compatibility isn’t a concern. It’s up to the community to create patches & drivers to make things work, and it can take a bit to get things working.

        I’m genuinely sorry you had the experience you did, but I hope that if you do return to Windows that you’ll give Linux another try in the future. Search your products to see if others have had issues, along with potential solutions, before you dive in.

        • Cold_Brew_Enema@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 day ago

          Thanks for the thoughtful response, and not chastising me like half the other people in this thread. Yes it’s been very frustrating because I want to switch full time. I don’t understand how I am having these issues on a reinstall of Linux, when my first install had none of these issues.

          • IHave69XiBucks@lemmygrad.ml
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            1 day ago

            If you have newer hardware mint isnt what you wanna use. It is more stability focused. There are other distros that arr more geared towards faster updates and supporting new stuff faster.

      • ShortN0te@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        Basically everything you stated, Bluetooth, Controller and GPU is hardware.

        Your experience is probably different since you still think and act like you use windows. This is normal. When you are used to something and then switch to something that works differently you will run into problems.

      • Xanza@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        I’m venting because I don’t understand how the experience is so vastly different for people.

        It’s always going to be a driver issue. It takes time and money to develop drivers for *nix, so most manufacturers don’t bother. It’s the most significant issue *nix has to deal with and if it wasn’t an issue, no one would deal with Windows.

              • stuner@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                Sorry to hear that Linux Mint is not working well for you. Unfortunately, things can sometimes still be rough when it comes to hardware support. I have personally also had issues with Nvidia GPUs and Bluetooth. Often this is because the manufacturers only provide drivers for Windows and Linux drivers need to be created by the community.

                Regarding Nvidia and secure boot. I’ve had the same issue (on both Mint and other distros). After some frustrations (including a BIOS update) I finally gave up and disabled secure boot. Since then, I haven’t had any issues with my dual boot with Win 10 (but I probably won’t buy another Nvidia GPU). What makes you say that Windows requires Secure Boot?

                No I didn’t. When I installed Linux mint the first time I was able to fix everything. I needed to reinstall it and that is where this controller issue started

                This seems quite weird. Are you perhaps missing a package (e.g. steam-devices)?

              • 0x0@programming.dev
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                1 day ago

                You might be better off with bare-metal linux and shoving windows inside a VM where it belongs.

                • Cold_Brew_Enema@lemmy.worldOP
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                  1 day ago

                  I tried installing a VM but man it was really laggy. I used the open source one on linix, not virtualbox. I probably fucked something up, though.

          • Hellmo_luciferrari@lemm.ee
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            1 day ago

            Nvidia isn’t responsible for the other issues you have… Did you do any research about your hardware and Linux compatibility?

            Bluetooth will be whatever wireless chipset you’re using likely.

            • Cold_Brew_Enema@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 day ago

              No I didn’t. When I installed Linux mint the first time I was able to fix everything. I needed to reinstall it and that is where this controller issue started