Hi,
I think that such an application would simply require too much manpower
(as you would have to keep tons of metadata up to date), although some
kind of wiki could help out.
The programming should be rather simple (you can readout hardware infos
on windows, don't you?) but the information management would be hell.
What I personally would prefer was a simple "Of course it runs with
linux/Yes, we provide GPLed drivers" Sticker on Pcs and Notebooks. *dream*
Ryan McDonough schrieb:
After proposing this in the Fedora irc room I decided to post it to
everyone on the list for feedback:
I would like to see an application that would run on windows/osx/linux
that would check hardware and see if your mobo/cpu/fans etc will work
with the newer kernels and if not what boot commands you may need and
what problems these boot commands may cause, it would check against the
current top 5 distrobutions kernels, plus the current standard kernel.
It wouldn't be total hardware like gfx etc, just the core hardware like
mobo, cpu, fans as its the hardware that you can't really change
(easily) unlike a video card.
I feel this would bring great benefits as it would allow people to see
if the newer distrobutions will actually boot with no problems without
having to download 700mb live cd images and take all the time and effort
to burn the cd and then have to report that it wouldn't boot on a forum.
I have experienced a problem with a kernel update after the 2.6.20
release that the newer distrobutions were using as I couldn't/can't boot
without noacpi acpi=off, added to my boot command which causes power
management to go bye bye along with my monitor after 15 minutes.
I'm not a great programmer as I've just started, but I would like to see
if people think this project is feasible and a good use of developers
time and help/learn as much as I could.
-Ryan
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