I have only previously played with ubuntu using virtual machines with VMware Fusion. So everything just sort of worked. I've never had to install any drivers. I'm considering putting it on some real hardware and using it as a media center. What should I be looking for as far as checking hardware compatibility? How does installing drivers work? Any quick and easy recommendations / guides?
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try running the LiveCD first,see if anything isn't working out of the box,usually the wireless connectivity is an issue in some installations |
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When I made the switch to Kubuntu (the KDE based flavour of Ubuntu) I first booted off the Live CD and found that everything worked. So rather than looking through long lists of things that work (as most things will), just pop in a CD and try it. |
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usually you don't need any driver when install ubuntu it recognize them itself. and you can use:
to determine what is your system configuration to find extra driver or check that this part can work on what distribution of ubuntu. |
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For a Media Center specifically:
Bottom line: Almost everything work with Linux now. The question is how much pain you want to deal with. The above is my recommendation for a minimum pain system. You're interested in stability with a media center, not bleeding edge features, latest drivers, etc... |
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If you're really cautious, you could look for a pre-built system that is sold with either Windows or Ubuntu, but the same hardware. Then you know all the pieces should work with either. Dell had some like this when I bought my computer. I wiped their pre-installed version of Ubuntu to set it up the way I liked it, but I didn't have to worry about hardware compatibility. |
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See the wikiYou can do some research on the Hardware Support section of the Ubuntu Wiki. It doesn't cover everything, but whatever you learn, you can contribute back. |
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Check out the UbuntuHCL.org hardware compatibility database. |
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