> in practice you're locked out from any old or obscure hardware unless you have a lot of time to spend playing kernel politics, keeping up with their API changes, or both.
no sympathy. you're also out of luck using old hardware in the first place because the manufacturer wants you to buy the new version. they will help you LESS than Linux devs. you're point is very unhelpful to the discussion, unless you got drivers updates from the manufacturer
> you're also out of luck using old hardware in the first place because the manufacturer wants you to buy the new version. they will help you LESS than Linux devs.
The manufacturer probably doesn't exist any more. They wrote decent drivers and supported them for a number of years, that should be enough. Or maybe a dedicated fan wrote some OSS drivers at some point in the past. On both Windows and FreeBSD that's good enough; once a driver has been written, it largely stays working, so I can keep using my hardware. This really is a unique downside of Linux.
no sympathy. you're also out of luck using old hardware in the first place because the manufacturer wants you to buy the new version. they will help you LESS than Linux devs. you're point is very unhelpful to the discussion, unless you got drivers updates from the manufacturer