• Cyborganism
    link
    fedilink
    308 months ago

    I have an OG Surface Pro. The first one. It’s running Windows 10 at the moment and it’s doing fine except for the occasional wifi/Bluetooth bugs. I’m using it exclusively in tablet mode with the pen. No keyboard.

    When Windows 10 is going to reach its end of life, I’d like to install Linux on it. But I need it to have a tablet style interface with gestures if possible.

    Do I need any special distro or drivers on that hardware? And what would you recommend as the desktop environment?

        • Cyborganism
          link
          fedilink
          38 months ago

          To add another comment to your reply, have you tried it personally?

          I’d like to back up my system before doing the switch. What do you recommend I use? Clonezilla with an external USB drive all plugged in using a USB hub?

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            38 months ago

            I haven’t tried the Surface images due to not having one, but I am using their Silverblue images to make the whole NVIDIA drivers thing a bit easier on my system.

            Also I haven’t needed to backup my system in over a year now (I stopped hopping with Silverblue) so I don’t remember the solution I used, but this seems good.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            2
            edit-2
            8 months ago

            From your live stick, bevor install, do

            # cp /dev/your-disk /your/image.img

            or to save space:

            # gzip < /dev/your-disk > /your/image.img.gz

            or faster but might need to install it first:

            # lz4 /dev/your-disk /your/image.img.lz4

            To get a list of your disks, there’s lsblk.

            I recommend partition-wise backup, it’s always a bother to extract/shrink individual partitions in images of whole disks. That would be /dev/your-disk1 etc

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          48 months ago

          Don’t want to be the guy shitting on Ubuntu, but Fedora is the way to go in my experience and afaik.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              58 months ago

              Fedora uses Wayland by default at least and it’s really smooth, and it has gotten much better in the last two years or so. It also is a rolling release, which means always the newest software and latest kernel, which further improves wayland performance.

              Canonical has made some questionable choices for Ubuntu in the last years like pushing the users to use snaps (which are shot) or advertisements in the terminal. But then again you can always use Debian in the first place i guess.

    • Cyfress
      link
      fedilink
      28 months ago

      Went to Fedora on Pro gen 1, works great. Pen input in Krita works great. Really miss the form factor of that first gen. I feel like they’re too big now.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      18 months ago

      I had one of those too! Sturdy little guy, reminds me a bit of the first eeepc 701 :-) But I was worried about the replacement of the charger once it would die. Besides, I have had a bad experience of Surface-line longevity, they always seem to die suddenly after a while, so I sold it.

      • Cyborganism
        link
        fedilink
        38 months ago

        Hey, you wanna know something about the EeePC?

        I was the build engineer that automated the process that put together the Linux OS for those things back in the day.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          28 months ago

          That is so awesome. Do you still have one lying around? Those things have an awesome form factor, but the I/O ports are a little bit dated by todays standard 😅

          • Cyborganism
            link
            fedilink
            28 months ago

            Nah. The hardware wasn’t very good and it was very slow. I had a 7" and a 9" one. I replaced them with the surface pro.

            The company was going to make custom Linux based OSes for other smart devices like TVs and monitors but Android came out and was backed by Google, so of course it became wildly popular. Our company went bankrupt pretty quickly after that because it had no the contracts coming in. Asus was the only client keeping them afloat and the contract was ending.