Kleene, Steven (kleenesj) composed on 2022-12-20 02:12 (UTC): > Today I have my new desktop and did a clean install of Bullseye.
Cardinal rule of PC shopping for use with Linux, unless you are a Linux developer: Make sure the major PC components are several months or more older than your selected distro's original release date. > lspci | grep VGA > 00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Intel Corporation Device 4692 (rev 0c) https://pci-ids.ucw.cz/read/PC/8086/4692 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alder_Lake "Intel officially announced 12th Gen Intel Core CPUs on October 27, 2021. Intel officially announced 12th Gen Intel Core mobile CPUs and non-K series desktop CPUs on January 4, 2022. ... Alder Lake." > Desktop: FVWM v: 2.6.8 vt: 1 dm: startx Distro: Debian GNU/Linux 11 > (bullseye) > Graphics: > Device-1: Intel vendor: ASUSTeK driver: N/A arch: Gen-12.2 > process: Intel 10nm built: 2021-22+ bus-ID: 00:02.0 chip-ID: 8086:4692 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debian_version_history#Debian_11_(Bullseye) "Debian 11 (Bullseye) was released on 14 August 2021.[1] It is based on the Linux 5.10 LTS kernel and will be supported for five years.[187]" Your situation is backwards, distro released (2021) long before the hardware (2022). Thus, out-of-the-box Bullseye can't be expected to support your GPU. To use Bullseye, at the least you need either a backport kernel containing Alder Lake support, or Bookworm (Testing) or Sid (Unstable). -- Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion, based on faith, not based on science. Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata