this post was submitted on 02 Apr 2026
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It really depends on your devices and what you want to do with them.
What I've noticed so far is that the generic drivers on Linux seem to cover more functionality (eg, my mouse didn't show battery status on windows without the proprietary drivers but it shows up in Linux), but if it's not covered by that, then odds are support will be more limited or none on Linux unless it's commonly owned.
Though depending on what kind of data your devices are dealing with, it might not be that bad to get it working. Like audio data is just a time series of amplitudes (though codecs can complicate that if you're dealing with some digital format), input devices are usually some combination of button press events and axis updates (and controller vibrate is pretty much just a lower bitrate audio signal). Video can be more complicated, but there's likely software that can understand whatever stream of data it gives off. But this all depends on patience and skill, and if you were the type to gravitate to something like that, you probably would have already switched.