On 13/01/2016, Dikomodo <dikom...@anche.no> wrote: > Hallo everybody > Is anybody Running Debian on Acer Aspire E5-571G? > Thankyou very much > >
The above message is the only message that I have seen in the thread, from the original poster, so I say this, without the above message explaining why the question is asked. If the issue is a matter of available software drivers for the hardware, you may want to consider UbuntuMATE 15.10 (the latest version of UbuntuMATE). The web site is at http://ubuntu-mate.org/ and the Downloads web page is at https://ubuntu-mate.org/wily/ I suggest UbuntuMATE, as, having had problems with Acer hardware not having drivers in Debian, I found the drivers in UbuntuMATE. As a single example, I have an Acer V3-772G which has an i7 CPU and an nVIDIA graphics thing, and, for two years, I could not get it running (other than with the hostile MS-Wing-ding), as I could not find an operational (I could not get MS-Wing-ding 8, working) operating system that had the drivers for the hardware. Then I tried Ubuntu, and, it worked without any problem (apart from the GNOME3 cesspool, and I was referred to UbuntuMATE, and have not looked back). I have other ACER laptops, running UbuntuMATE 15.10, and, the bottom line is that Ubuntu has the most comprehensive collection of drivers, and, is most likely to have drivers for the most recent hardware. Or, that is my experience. The closest (in terms of having drivers available for the hardware) other operating system that I found, was DragonflyBSD, but, whilst that was the only other (Non-MS) operating system that had a driver for the i7 CPU, it did not have an available driver for the nVIDIA graphics thing. So, my recommendation is that, if the question is an issue of availability of drivers for the hardware, you consider UbuntuMATE. -- Bret Busby Armadale West Australia .............. "So once you do know what the question actually is, you'll know what the answer means." - Deep Thought, Chapter 28 of Book 1 of "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy: A Trilogy In Four Parts", written by Douglas Adams, published by Pan Books, 1992 ....................................................