Linked by Eugenia Loli on Tue 18th Apr 2006 17:49 UTC
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RE[7]: My answer is YES
by SpasmaticSeacow on Wed 19th Apr 2006 16:06
in reply to "RE[6]: My answer is YES"
Untrue. In practice, most hardware uses a fairly standard set of hardware APIs with some minor differences. In fact, you could easily fit the drivers for every commercially available piece of hardware on a single CD and still have room for other stuff.
It's true that a driver disk for Windows might install 10-100M of software when you load the driver, but what's necessary to actually support the hardware is only a few Kbytes. Linux does a better job than Windows of generalizing hardware in this respect.




Member since:
2006-02-11
"Out-of-the-box" means that it installed at the same time as the OS, not separately. We're not actually talking about the video card's box...
If an OS must provide drivers for all possible out of the box, a full DVD or even HD-DVD/Blu-Ray will not enough for the installation disk. It is make more sense if a computer/laptop is preinstalled for specific hardware, thus only need to provide certain drivers, e.g. Dell, Lenovo, etc. I heard a pre-installed linux laptop, but may be it's for geeks' consumption only.