On Fri, Jan 12, 2007 at 10:50:19PM -0500, Grok Mogger wrote: > My goal is ultimately the following. I want to be able to say > "I'm interested in getting a Super Device 4000" and then go > through whatever steps I need to verify that it will or won't > work before I even try it. I'd like to at least understand how > I could theoretically do that, even if it isn't always possible > to accomplish. >
There's no way that one person, however tallented, could have the time to check each new device (and all the permutations) against existing kernel modules. There just aren't enough seconds in the day. This is swimming upstream. Try swimming downstream. A WizzBang Mach 2 comes out. Some brave soul says "I'll try that on my Linux box". Three outcomes: 1) It works. Nothing to do, no email to send, so nothing that anyone else wanting to try it can google on. 2) It doesn't work. Brave Soul doesn't, for whatever reason, persue it. Just either returns it or waits until there is support. 3. It doesn't work, sends an email to a Linux list somewhere. Now there's something to google on. So what the user does is figure out what they want, then decide if they need bleeding-edge or can work with slightly older-tech. Then google it: wizbang linux OR debian and see what comes back, and possibly refines the search. If nothing negative turns up, check the return policy of the store. Also remember that if your Debian Stable is getting a little long in the tooth, you may need to go to Testing to get support for newer hardware. Another reason to stay away from bleeding edge unless you are comfortable with testing. YMMV. Good hunting. Doug. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]