@Rigo
Quote:
Rigo wrote:
@Elwood
See, you are so quick to doubt OS4 :)
In actual fact, DDC information is not the only type of data that is reported wrongly by many devices out there.
Many USB devices (especially the cheaper Asian variety) simply don't care about standards at all, and what's even more shocking is the amount of well branded items that don't adhere to the rules of their class either. This is one of the reasons Linux has a huge blacklist of USB devices, and why MicroSoft get the manufacturers to write their own drivers.
How anyone can expect OS4 to keep up with shitty hardware that just doesn't play by the rules, I don't know. What's even more of a problem is that the list of "dirty" hardware is growing quicker than the list of developers which try to keep up with it :/
Simon
There have been times when I've considered starting a website with a URL such as donotbuythis####.org (insert four letter word of choice at ####), and a companion site called buystuffthatreallyworks.org. They would review products that are utter total ####, and ones that are high quality, respectively. Added to that they would serve as a reminder that buying cheap garbage that doesn't work properly (or serves no useful purpose) and/or breaks too fast is a waste of materials, adds to the growing pile of garbage, and is bad for the environment.
The "I'll buy the cheapest item, and just buy a new one if it breaks" attitude is killing the planet, and is making our jobs harder.
I think that such websites would be a good idea, except I don't have the time to maintain something like this, or deal with the aggravated arguments surrounding which products should and shouldn't be listed on which site.
Hans