About two years ago, I came to the US for college, running an old Lenovo laptop from 2012 running EndeavourOS.
All was good in the world until I had to connect to my dorm’s wifi. For some reason, they had a proprietary wifi system, a and it only provided config program in .deb and .rpm format, and the aur had no equivalent to it.
I may have been an Arch user, but I was a dumb Arch user. I blindly installed AUR packages without checking them, not that I could even read that stuff, to begin with. So, you can imagine my struggle trying to install a .rpm to EndeavourOS.
I eventually got it to working and lived my life using the old laptop falling apart. I caved, in and got a brand new Dell XPS 15 during a sale, but Dell being Dell canceled my Order without notifying me, leaving me left with my current hog water system for another three months.
And by then, Framework had released their new laptop with really cool hardware, so I jumped the gun on that.
By then, the Framework laptop was using some very new hardware. Much of it requires a lot of configuration for a barebones Arch install to take advantage of.
And at that point, struggling through the Arch wiki trying to get my fingerprint reader to work when I type sudo, I thought do I use Linux because I enjoy the tinkering of my system? Or because I just really like Gnome and virtual desktops?
The answer was the latter, then Q for a few weeks, trying out a few distros that worked. Lo and behold, Fedora was officially recognized and supported by the Framework team, came with pretty recent software packages, and had a near-stock Gnome experience.
Two years now, and so far, only one catastrophic issue that seemingly went away.
P.S. Please change the default subvolume to @ and @home. It’s the customization I use to get Timeshift BTRFS snapshots to work.
And it turns out, after all that hassle, the guide I followed for my college’s wifi was outdated. All I had to do was download the certificate and just login with my school email. lol!