I have also heard this sentiment, that enterprise/business level hardware is best, even for personal use
Thanks, didn't know about the Broadcom wifi part.
It's just that my model is a newer generation Dell and I've heard from multiple people that Dell is getting more and more locked down and proprietary like Apple, so im thinking that's why I haven't had the best linux experience on this darn thing.
oh dude i never do backups each time i start over from scratch its a brand new version of linux. the only "important" files (that I know of), i sync to the cloud.
Yup that did it. but when I report the errors, nothing freaking happens. it just loads and loads and loads and hangs.
is it really that simple? I was trying ways to like separate them or block them from each other
Hmm I always though western digital was pretty decent for hard drives?
Lol really???? why is that? surely those are of way less quality than others available, right?
Wow that is amazing, thanks for sharing.
Thanks. I do not want to mess around with virtualization; I went down that rabbithole before and got lost and broke stuff lol. I need to do a bit more research and learning before im more confident with virtualization. So how large should the swap be? and what about a bootloader?? Are all three compatible with grub? also how large should the bootloader partition be? thanks, this is all a bit foreign to me.
Same, I am also a Linux user. What are your favorite brands?
so basically if the computer has the specs that meet the distros newest version's requirements, it theoretically should be gold?