Maybe CentOS 7.4 would have backported compatibility for your hardware. I had similar issues with Intel GPU not being recognized, which was solved by "i915 preliminary hw support enabled" method. Try to have a look on that.
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 10:24 PM, wwp subscript@free.fr wrote:
Hello Matthew,
On Thu, 27 Jul 2017 15:59:35 -0400 Matthew Miller mattdm@mattdm.org wrote:
On Thu, Jul 27, 2017 at 08:38:14PM +0200, wwp wrote:
Say, instead of stable, something not rawhide. But I'll examine all options that do work, so let's forget about "stable".
In that case — and I freely admit I have some bias here — I highly recommend Fedora. It's not stable in the sense of strict ABI compliance, although we try to minimize disruption within the 13-month life of a release, but it is stable in the "does not crash" sense.
Right, I'm currently digging that way, struggling a bit w/ the way I write the F26 ISO to a USB flashdrive (I'll succeed tomorrow, found better howtos to get rid of unetbootin issues).
Fedora could be stable enough even if not a standard/reference in industry at all (which sticks to RH releases), I would have loved a CentOS because it is way more compliant to my "corporate" needs (LTS), but a Fedora could be do it, if it really does it, at least until CentOS8 is out.
Regards,
-- wwp
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