I want to build my personal Linux computer from scratch. I love custom configurations and admire people who spend time to select each component car...
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No, "Seems" is generally as close as it gets. Being a community driven OS, hardware support is what someone has spent their time to add support for. Across Distros hardware support can be different as the different communities have different priorities.
There are however companies that sell pre-built machines with Linux. System76 and Dell come to mind.
Thanks for your clarification! I see. This is something I have to accept.
I think you are a bit over thinking it. If the components are new enough they are close to 100% compatible (2009 and up). I have found components which say Linux supported (even in the manual written something simular to "work on Ubuntu 16.04") and had to install near 10-15 packages just so it can work barely. (touch screen)
I see. So, you're telling me compatibility is not a problem with modern hardware. Thank you for your answer.
Certainly the manufacturers of video cards and sound cards actively thwart Linux operability. Those are the Hollywood-adjacent peripherals. At some point we should have advocated for there being a category of devices that are for passive consumption of popular culture and are of course as DRMed as a copy of Mathematica and as tamper-proof as a fine Swiss watch, while letting personal computers be general-purpose computing machines on which you can code any algorithm but on which you can't watch a DVD. But that window of opportunity is probably gone (assuming it ever existed). Even W3C has caved on EME's.