On Thu, 8 Jul 2021 at 05:29, GianPiero Puccioni < gianpiero.pucci...@isc.cnr.it> wrote:
> I am waiting for delivery of my new laptop, and it comes with SSD, is > there a > "better" filesystem for SSD (or in general). > Unless you have a special use case or are installing an old version of Fedora, there are advantages to sticking with the installer's default filesystem. Most new systems come with SSD, so the defaults should be well suited to newer mainstream SSD's and typical usage patterns. If you stick with a configuration most other users have, it is easier to sort out any issues that you might encounter. Also, your chances that other users with similar hardware will have already encountered issues that affect your new system are much better. It is well worth checking for reports of issue with other linux distros on your hardware. Newer laptops often have issues with wifi, sound, and display drivers. Many long-time linux users keep a USB wifi wifi dongle and USB sound devices for use when the available linux drivers won't work. For display issues you usually a choice of open source and proprietary drivers, and many high-end laptops offer two graphics devices (chipset and a hardware accelerator). Worst case you may end up with degraded performance until you find a proprietary driver that works with your hardware. -- George N. White III
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