this post was submitted on 19 Nov 2025
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Maybe I've just had bad luck. I had an issue where my second monitor wasn't being detected at all in Linux, but was fine in Windows. There was a fix, fortunately someone in a forum had the same issue, but it was a command line fix. And IIRC it wasn't permanent either - I think I had to retype it on reboot.
I also have a 3 button mouse with the middle button set to double click in Windows. There was no linux driver for it. I'm sure its possible to get it working, but quite how, I've no idea.
Basically I've installed various flavours of Linux maybe 5 times, and each time had to abort and go back to windows after a day or two because I couldn't find how to fix a particular issue.
That distinction makes a difference. I was thinking you were saying once installed you had to do command line stuff. Like a person was here the other day that thought it passwords could not be changed without a command line.
But since you did clarify, hardware is indeed a pain if it isn't supported. I put a lot of that on the vendors. Why would a mouse need its own drivers and software? That seems crazy.
And to put it into perspective: I have 3 monitors, different resolutions and refresh rates. I did nothing to make it work, it just did. My desktop and laptop have been pretty much zero effort on my part to make them work.
On the other hand I have 3 windows machines that I am dealing with for others and the audio driver is clearly the issue with one, nvidias driver with the other, and a failed MS update with the third.
Guess what? Every fix requires the command line. In Windows. Computers can suck. And after hours of working with the broken install (DISM, Scannow, ISO downoader extraction, and on and on, it looks like the only fix is a reinstall. It bluescreens and will not update. Yet the hardware is fine, its all drivers.