this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2025
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As Torvalds pointed out in 2019, is that while some major hardware vendors do sell Linux PCs – Dell, for example, with Ubuntu – none of them make it easy. There are also great specialist Linux PC vendors, such as System76, Germany's TUXEDO Computers, and the UK-based Star Labs, but they tend to market to people who are already into Linux, not disgruntled Windows users. No, one big reason why Linux hasn't taken off is that there are no major PC OEMs strongly backing it. To Torvalds, Chromebooks "are the path toward the desktop."

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[–] WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 day ago

Well, disagree about SecureBoot, there's nothing secure about MS signing your binaries. It's just proof they are signed by MS. Setting TPM under Linux is, eh, something I've never done.

that's the difficult part of SecureBoot: you need to set up MOK and somehow sign the bootloader, kernel, modules with it.
but against small scale intrusions even the MS signed things could work