Det finns ett flertal tillverkare som levererar system med Debian eller andra distributioner av GNU/Linux förinstallerat. Du kan betala mer för privilegiet men det ger en känsla av trygghet eftersom du kan vara säker på att maskinvaran har bra stöd av GNU/Linux.
Om du måste köpa en maskin paketerad med Windows, läs noga igenom programvarulicensen som kommer med Windows; du kan ha möjligheten att vägra licensen och hämta ut en återbetalning från din försäljare. Sök på Internet efter ”windows refund” och du kan hitta användbar information för det här ändamålet.
Oavsett om du köper ett system paketerat med Linux eller inte, eller kanske till och med ett begagnat system, är det fortfarande viktigt att kontrollera att din maskinvara stöds av Linux-kärnan. Kontrollera om din maskinvara finns listad i referenserna som hittas ovan. Låt din försäljare (om någon) veta att du vill köpa ett system för Linux. Stöd de maskinvarutillverkare som är Linux-vänliga.
Some hardware manufacturers simply won't tell us how to write drivers for their hardware. Others won't allow us access to the documentation without a non-disclosure agreement that would prevent us from releasing the driver's source code, which is one of the central elements of free software. Since we haven't been granted access to usable documentation on these devices, they simply won't work under Linux.
In many cases there are standards (or at least some de-facto standards) describing how an operating system and its device drivers communicate with a certain class of devices. All devices which comply to such a (de-facto-)standard can be used with a single generic device driver and no device-specific drivers are required. With some kinds of hardware (e.g. USB ”Human Interface Devices”, i.e. keyboards, mice, etc., and USB mass storage devices like USB flash disks and memory card readers) this works very well and practically every device sold in the market is standards-compliant.
In other fields, among them e.g. printers, this is unfortunately not the case. While there are many printers which can be addressed via a small set of (de-facto-)standard control languages and therefore can be made to work without problems in any operating system, there are quite a few models which only understand proprietary control commands for which no usable documentation is available and therefore either cannot be used at all on free operating systems or can only be used with a vendor-supplied closed-source driver.
Even if there is a vendor-provided closed-source driver for such hardware when purchasing the device, the practical lifespan of the device is limited by driver availability. Nowadays product cycles have become short and it is not uncommon that a short time after a consumer device has ceased production, no driver updates get made available any more by the manufacturer. If the old closed-source driver does not work anymore after a system update, an otherwise perfectly working device becomes unusable due to lacking driver support and there is nothing that can be done in this case. You should therefore avoid buying closed hardware in the first place, regardless of the operating system you want to use it with.
Du kan hjälpa till att förbättra denna situation genom att uppmuntra tillverkare av sluten hårdvara att släppa dokumentationen och andra resurser som är nödvändiga för att vi ska kunna tillhandahålla fria drivrutiner för deras hårdvara.