Make sure you are extremely clear here - unless I'm mistaken, they're not buggy, they just don't support your shitty hardware very well. There's a difference.
After all, running Windows without a decent anti-virus is like walking through a Red Light District after eating five metric tonnes of Viagra.
i am sorry, but this comment is mindless.you appear to be saying that FC and Ubuntu work perfectly unless the user has "shitty" hardware.
I am sure you are aware that Slackware is not well known for working easily with "shitty" hardware, and so your point that people with shitty hardware would prefer slackware to FC or Ubuntu is patently ridiculous.
ha! and all you people saying how easy windows is to customise make me laugh!customising windows is simply a case of getting some shitty nagware from tucows or download.com (probably with a name like TweakPC or XPConfigPro or some shit) and hoping it doesn't screw your PC up too much when you try it. With open source software you get software that has been tested and bugfixed by a number of independent respondents, doesn't contain nagware or malware (for the above reason, generally speaking) and i also find that *ix software is easier to configure, like in rc files and with CLI switches et cetera. also, i have yet to see a windows package with a decent man page.
As it turned out, Slackware's older kernel worked well with Tex's hardware. And my definition of "shitty" here kinda includes stuff that is so old that support for it has been taken out of 2.6.x kernels. I'm not sure why Slackware doesn't use the 2.6 kernel yet, nor what the implications would be of backing FC6 out to a 2.4 kernel. So installing Slackware just to get the 2.4 kernel that's compatible with your hardware might be the quickest way to get things moving.(I suspect that if the 2.4 kernel from Slackware worked, it's because some particular module was included, and thus building a 2.6 kernel with that particular module installed would solve the problem - however, that doesn't always work)
$ uname -r2.6.17.13