I guess, all depends on what type of driver you're installing; but I had to install win10 on my brother's PC last week, these are the steps I had to take to install AMD's drivers (because the ones included with windows suck):
Open Edge.
Download Opera (his browser of choice) and install it.
Google "AMD Drivers", go to the website
Lookup the exact model of the processor: "Ryzen 3 3200G".
Try to guess what fucking .exe file to download, since their descriptions are vague.
Double click the .exe.
next, deselect bloatware, next, install.
Error on installation
Lookup error code.
Turns out Windows was downloading (not installing) an update at the same time, without telling me.
Wait 15 minutes for windows to finish doing whatever it wants to do, without user consent.
I don't know why it's become a stigma that installing things on Linux is hard when Windows requires you to Google sketchy .exes and .msis because their app store is so trash. For 99% of packages on Linux you can just open the software manager and click install.
Because Windows doesn't require you to google sketchy .exes and .msis....
Unless you just consider them inherently sketchy, but can't really do anything about that. Hell the backlash for the store was mainly because people wanted to keep using .exes's.
They did not. In fact, Windows ships in S mode now, which means you can't install ANYTHING outside of the appstore. Not even Office downloaded directly from Office(dot)com. You can turn S mode off, for now, but you need to (and I'm not shittin you) install an app from the appstore that disables S mode. But not without confirming that you're serious several times, and read through fear mongering with a "you get viruses if you install outside the appstore" scare tactic.
I’m gonna get hate, but I much prefer the independent distribution of exe files over package managers. I’ve still yet to have a good experience with a package manager. Almost all end up with outdated versions of software. My discord broke for a full day because the central arch repo hadn’t updated yet.
If you look up Discord on the Arch wiki, you will find instructions to prevent this.
In other words, RTFM! (/s, I also had to be directed there by some redditor while ago)
I find that if I have to RTFM for my daily computer I’m always going to hate using it. I don’t like having to tinker with my operating system. It’s not fun, it just makes me hate Linux. There’s a reason I switched back to windows after a week. Nothing works and I’m not willing to waste hours of my time trying to fix it.
It was the only one I could get to work with my hardware. Tried Ubuntu, mint and Pop, and none of then worked. Arch was the only one that would output to 3 displays.
I can say this about literally anything.
You bought a new car, but it requires you to send nudes to the automobile company owner to be able to start the car?
If you're concerned with it, then you have an issue. If you're not, you don't.