I love my MacBook and I love trying new things. Among all the major desktop GUIs out there: Windows, macOS, and Linux, I like Linux the best. I tried to install Ubuntu before on my 2015 MacBook Pro a couple of years back. It had some issues and I ended up uninstalling it. With Ubuntu 20.04, I decided to give it another shot and tried to dual boot Ubuntu with macOS on my 2017 MacBook.
So last night, I backed up my MacBook using Time Machine. This morning, I was so excited to do the installation that I got up at 6:30 to install Ubuntu 20.04 along side macOS. I had to delete the local Time Machine snapshots before partitioning the drive using Disk Utility. After that, the installation went well mainly because I followed a YouTube tutorial.
After the install, I logged into Ubuntu. The first thing I noticed is my trackpad didnโt work. I searched online and found three command lines I needed to run then it got fixed. I struggled for a couple of hours trying to get the speakers to work. The headphone works but not the laptop speakers. In the end, I couldnโt find the solution. Around 1 pm, I called it quits and deleted the partitions I created this morning and deleted the ubuntu grub folder so everything is back to where I started.
My conclusion is that Linux and MacBooks don't play well. To me, Apple makes great looking laptops and I want a great customizable OS to go with it. In my opinion, that's Linux. I know Linux has less trouble working with Windows machines and I like the new Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition that has Ubuntu baked in. But that's another $1000+ I don't want to spend right now. I just wish Linux worked better on Macs.
Anyone with similar thoughts?
Top comments (4)
There is a nice article summing up the suggestions by rcohen04 in an explicit tutorial: lifewire.com/dual-boot-linux-and-m...
Hey! Give this a shot and let me know!
Linux on MacBook Pro 2016 / 2017
Cris ๐จ๐ปโ๐ป ใป May 11 ใป 8 min read
Thanks for the link! Wish I saw this during my installation. I don't think I want to install Linux again right now. But if I do, I know where to look.
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