Thumb driving distros is the plan, just looking for leads to cut down on time messing around. It's an Intel wifi adapter circa 2016. I bought the laptop basically as a typewriter during the plandemic, it used to connect to wifi, but we replaced the router a year ago.
I was planning on starting with Mint since I haven't done Linux since probably 2005.
Grab a copy of endeavour OS and attempt it on a thumb drive Arch base, very close to steam OS. Or hell, even grab a copy of Steam OS itself. They both have the same driver support at the end of the day.
But is right here.
You need to give us a bit of info about the laptop at least. make model would help a great deal.
Sadly, there are simply some chipsets that are not supported well. The manufacturers dont offer information into how it works.
Mint will MOST LIKELY be the most compatable distro. Fedora is also very user friendly out of the box. Arch will be the one you will be able to brute force, but has the "hard" sterotype for a reason. Plus you'll probably have to get drivers from the AUR, so use at your own risk
try Endeavour and learn YAY. Yay makes arch pretty easy for AUR support. its a damn good swiss army knife, but it still does fail occasionally.
I'm not worried about AUR support, on it's own. YAY and Pamac make it butt-easy to use the AUR. My bigger concern is the general safety of the packages themselves. Lately there's been a major uptick in the bad actors putting sketchy packages in there. in general: the AUR is the least safe way to install stuff just because of the nature of how it's maintained.
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