[Discussion] Debian on new hardware
Posted: 2024-07-13 11:24
I've been playing with Debian 12 on a number of my PCs, more as an educational effort than anything else. It was not an issue on my 10+yr old hardware or my 4 year old laptop. Not even an issue on 2 yr old Intel or AMD systems.
But recently I caught a sale on an Intel based N100 NUC from GMKtec. It came with 8GB of DRAM, 256GB NVME m2.2280 SSD with Windows pre-installed for $129. I clicked buy immediately as I was looking for an improved performance box to replace my Rasberry Pi 4. This wasn't much more than a RPI 5.
I pulled the Win 11 SSD and put in a new 1TB and upgraded the DRAM to 16GB and started to play with distro performance to get a feel for how useful the N100 is.
What I learned is that my N100 which came with RealTek WiFi and BT is too new for Debian 12 or even ubuntu based distros based on kernels that are 6.1 or older.
This made me wonder about the general philosophy of Debian to supporting new hardware. The N100 (Alder Lake N) was introduced about a year ago with deep discount systems available for about 4-6 months.
Is it generally accepted that you don't use Debian stable on hardware that is newer than the original release date of current stable version, Debian 12 in this case?
No newer hardware specific upgrades during the life of the Stable version?
But recently I caught a sale on an Intel based N100 NUC from GMKtec. It came with 8GB of DRAM, 256GB NVME m2.2280 SSD with Windows pre-installed for $129. I clicked buy immediately as I was looking for an improved performance box to replace my Rasberry Pi 4. This wasn't much more than a RPI 5.
I pulled the Win 11 SSD and put in a new 1TB and upgraded the DRAM to 16GB and started to play with distro performance to get a feel for how useful the N100 is.
What I learned is that my N100 which came with RealTek WiFi and BT is too new for Debian 12 or even ubuntu based distros based on kernels that are 6.1 or older.
This made me wonder about the general philosophy of Debian to supporting new hardware. The N100 (Alder Lake N) was introduced about a year ago with deep discount systems available for about 4-6 months.
Is it generally accepted that you don't use Debian stable on hardware that is newer than the original release date of current stable version, Debian 12 in this case?
No newer hardware specific upgrades during the life of the Stable version?