this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2024
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Ubuntu 24.x, because that's what I'm most familiar with, and it's one of the officially supported distros. Admittedly, this was from a Live USB, and not installed on my system.
On my Windows desktop, I had dual-boot with Linux (Ubuntu again), and it refused to work with my wifi card. I spent endless hours trying to get it working and just gave up.
This is almost unheard of for me with Windows. 99% of the hardware just works, and the other 1% often has a very simple driver installation process.
You need a distro with up to date kernel, for recent Intel laptops, and it will work out of the box.
Installed it on an external drive (Fedora 40) and everything is working, including the fingerprint scanner. Well, not everything. No adguard for linux, a steam game I play doesn't support linux, etc. But it is smooth and seems more refined than what I remember Ubuntu being. maybe I'll stick to Fedora when I have to use Linux :)
You don't need adguard, just register with nextdns and use it as your system's DNS. By not supporting Linux you mean that it doesn't run with Steam's proton compatibility layer? Nowadays the games which don't work, usually are the ones using some form of aggressive anti-cheat measures. Online multiplayer stuff.
I did set up Adguard DNS blocking, but it's so unrefined vs. the actual adguard software. Plus, I like to route everything through adguard, not just the browser stuff.
In steam, it looks like there's a button that shows only Linux-compatible games. And the game in question isn't on the list. Perhaps it can be run through some emulator or alternate steam version, but I was just testing and didn't explore it deeply.
That's why I said to set it up globally, as system DNS, not just in the browser. Nextdns also allows you to pick the lists of filters. When it comes to Linux always check the game's compatibility through ProtonDB (unless it's native).
Yes, I can set Adguard DNS system wide, and even self host Adguard home (similar to pi-hole) if I wanted.
But DNS-based adblocking doesn't reformat pages to make it look like an ad was never there. Having blank spaces where an ad used to be just looks bad.
Thanks for the tip.
Ok sure, but isn't that what browser add-ons like ublock are for?
Yes, but it's cleaner not to have another add-on. I think it's perfectly fine for 99% of users, so I'm probably splitting hairs on that point.
Maybe my Windows-brain is overthinking privacy tools when it comes to Linux. LOL
Possibly ;) I forgot to add another thing regarding games. When looking for a Linux compatibility, look for Steam Deck compatibility on the game's page. Since Steam deck runs Linux (Arch to be precise) it's the same thing.