On 12/02/12 13:32, Boden Matthews wrote:
The majority of PC parts are compatible with Ubuntu - such is
the benefit of a monolithic kernel. What will the PC be used
for? (gaming, internet browsing, email, image editing, etc.)
...
Strictly speaking, that's not the benefit of a monolithic kernel;
it's the benefit of a large built-in driver set. But that's not a
big deal. :-)
On 12 February 2012 12:21, Steve Colmer
<pinet...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if I was able to get on the mailing
list.
I am looking at buying a desktop computer compatible
with ubuntu and was wondering if anyone had any
suggestions.
As Boden mentioned, the majority of PC parts are compatible with
Ubuntu. My general preference is to go for devices that are not
bleeding edge. In general, i find that Intel network cards (both
wired and wireless) and video chipsets have excellent driver
support. This is more important on laptops than desktops, though,
since power management seems to rely a lot on driver quality.
With desktop video cards, Intel chipsets have the lowest performance
(of the major video card vendors) overall, but excellent driver
support. ATI & NVIDIA chipsets have both a free and a
proprietary driver. Generally the proprietary driver will have
better features and more performance (especially in 3D), but will be
somewhat less stable and harder to administer. Personally, i don't
care very much about 3D performance, so i usually go for the free
driver.
Any Intel chipset ICH8 or later supports SATA hotplug - this can be
a useful feature on a desktop if you have a case with a significant
number of hard disks.
Paul