- Damage@feddit.itEnglish5 months
First of all, it says it took a month of time from when he posted the initial bounty, not a month of labour… Maybe it took less. Anyway if someone has this sort of skills, they should make good money anywhere.
- mal3oon@lemmy.worldEnglish5 months
True, but the guy who fixed it is an EU researcher in CS in Canada. I highly doubt he did it for the money. He seems to be into puzzles. It sucks that Lenovo did not compensate him though.
- frongt@lemmy.zipEnglish5 months
Thanks, I read it and scrolled up and down looking for it, but either it blends in or I was insufficiently caffeinated.
- Geth@lemmy.dbzer0.comEnglish5 months
Was it really easier to post this question instead of reading the article?
- sem@lemmy.blahaj.zoneEnglish5 months
Yep! That’s why we do it. Some people like responding to the comments! I’m sorry it bothers you, but not that sorry.
Uairhahs@lemmy.worldEnglish
5 monthsI’m a little perplexed by this I have a bash script that fixes this (I have this laptop) I never needed to compile a kernel or follow all these steps. Ran the script once and it just works, across all updates no issues yet…
Update: Realised this is for the 7i 10th gen, I have 9i 9th gen (nevermind my ramblings)
- 5 months
I have an ASUS laptop that maps its multiple speakers incorrectly under Linux, it’s been killing me for months and I’m now considering it. I was not prepared for the realization that the Linux path forward would be to just pay by the bug fix.
- BD89@lemmy.sdf.orgEnglish5 months
You could always try using hardware vendors with better support and customer service.
- 5 months
No.
I had that laptop before I tried to move it to Linux and I’m not buying a new one. It does work under Windows.
This is not my laptop not supporting Linux, this is Linux not supporting my laptop. Because I already own the laptop. If people weren’t trying to cheerlead for their preferred OS for other reasons than… you know, whether it’s good or not, this wouldn’t even be a discussion. In fact, half the “Windows sucks” angles these days are down to “Windows 11 doesn’t support specific pieces of pre-existing hardware”. Which, you know, is the exact problem I’m having here.
Now, would ASUS finally paying attention to the ecosystem make it easier for a whole bunch of people to move over? Sure. Of course. But that doesn’t contradict my previous statements.




