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linux hardware incompatibilty list

Posted: Sat 07 Aug 2010, 08:58
by smith
Check it out & dunno how useful it might be in regard to puppy. notice when clicking on the wifi link that the d-link dwl g122 (USB) goes on the 'in'compatibility with Linux section. I’ve got the B account droning on 4 (all I've tried so far) system (3 laps & 1 desk) by puppy 2.12 live CD

Posted: Wed 16 Feb 2011, 12:24
by ObliviousJinx
muggins wrote:jonyo,

did you post this to the site? as it says:
This site is a wiki, which means anyone can edit the text.
Yes, it is a wiki but the list is somehow reliable

installs

Posted: Sat 26 Mar 2011, 01:00
by Boru
Although it took some doing, I have managed to install Puppy on my Thinkpad 240 with 168MB of memory. It required removing the HD and installing the system using my desktop and then returning the HD to the 240. The 240 doesn't support external boot and doesn't have a DVD or Floppy, but has a non booting usb port.

This message is being sent on it and all the apps seem to work although slowly.

Thanks for the effort from the puppy team. I now have 4 different linux systems on different machines in home. I guess I enjoy the challenge of making it work.

Thanks for listening

Puppy incompatible

Posted: Mon 02 May 2011, 00:10
by Flash858
Well, my new video card is not Linux incompatible, but it is Puppy incompatible, as every effort I have made to get the driver installed has failed. I can get it running fine in the "big" distros, but the darn thing just won't build in Puppy.

So I would definitely avoid the Nvidia GT 430 for now...

Posted: Fri 15 Jul 2011, 21:35
by Aitch
Flash858

Been awhile since your post, but I remember posting this a couple of days ago
There's a dotpet for the Nvidia GT 430

http://www.murga-linux.com/puppy/viewtopic.php?t=66961

Aitch :)

Thanks

Posted: Thu 04 Aug 2011, 15:45
by Flash858
STILL did not work for some reason. I am missing something very simple here, I just know it...

ATI M4 onboard video

Posted: Wed 10 Oct 2012, 02:57
by pishta
I got it to work once in Xorg but I cant remember what I used to make it work. It works great in Xvesa, but not Xorg? This is on an old Dell Inspiron 8000. My down arrow doesnt work either? Is there a Dell 8xxx keyboard profile in Puppy, as there is in Ubuntu? Ubuntu has a terrible timing issue with this graphics card, that is why I came back to Puppy and now I dont know why I ever left it!

TI TNETW1130GVF miniPCI wireless card

Posted: Wed 10 Oct 2012, 03:16
by pishta
Puppy doesnt autodetect is as Ubuntu does, BUT if you install with the NDIS wrapper using just the TNETW1130.inf file from a windows driver, it seems to work just fine. This little card is under a few big names, DLink, USRobotics, and even inside an old Westell 327 Wireless DSL modem, pulls right out. Installs as a pci: Texas Instruments 111 54Mbps Wireless Interface but I had a hard time trying to use the 111 driver that Puppy provided... :cry:

Posted: Wed 10 Oct 2012, 05:22
by cthisbear
Specs:

http://gdgt.com/dell/inspiron/8000/specs/

:::::::

Mate we love to help but >>>> PLEASE

give us your Puppy version....frustrating.......

""""""

Absolute stinker.

Linux driver downloads not working.

http://www.wireless-driver.com/ti-tnetw ... ss-driver/

http://www.wireless-driver.com/ti-tnetw ... et-driver/

http://www.wireless-driver.com/Linux-Su ... TW1130GVF/

Chris.

Posted: Fri 22 Nov 2013, 13:38
by ardvark
This thread goes clear back to 2006 and from what I can see, the list is no longer being maintained or updated. :(

Regards...

linux hardware incompatibilty list

Posted: Wed 29 Jul 2015, 21:17
by Billtoo
Here's an inexpensive pc that *is* linux friendly.
64bit dual core processor,32gb SSD,4 usb 3.0 ports,2gb ram.
Comes with 64bit Windows 8.1, bios can be changed to allow booting
linux from usb drives.
Screenshot shows Linux Mint 17.2 64bit running from a 1TB usb 3.0 hard
drive.

Love it!

hp stream 200 mini desktop

Posted: Thu 24 Dec 2015, 00:35
by Pelo
hp stream 200 mini desktop really interested by these new items !
A computer (windows ) on quite an usb stick connected by HDMI to your TV is the future too (proposed by Amazon when shopping the HP stream mini)

Posted: Tue 12 Feb 2019, 20:10
by Mike Walsh
I still say that the easiest way to avoid heartbreak (& mucho frustration!) is to research your required hardware before you buy.

Personally, I couldn't care less if my hardware looks like the back-end of a No. 9 bus, so long as it works. Too many people still go for the shiny stuff that catches their eye ("Well, it works in Windows....")....and then seem to spend days or even weeks trying to force a square peg into a round hole, and make it work.

Linux has come a long way since the very beginning of this thread in 2006. Notwithstanding Canonical's ongoing efforts to streamline the kernel by only including the newest, most powerful and up-to-date stuff (idiots!!), the kernel pretty much supports almost any piece of hardware you can think of.....my graphics adapter from 3 years prior to this thread's inception still works fine, giving a lovely crisp picture.

I was lucky that the Logitech c920 webcam I'd had my eye on for a long time was supported, OOTB, by the in-kernel 'UVC' driver - USB Video Class.Plug it in, and.....it just 'works'. Try doing that 10 years back......


Mike. :wink: