My guess is that somehow data left in ram is causing the driver to get screwy. However, that still wouldn’t make sense as it shouldn’t be using uninitialized memory.
I guess do a full power off before switching OS. The other option is to just run a Windows VM.
The other option is to just use Windows, which is the issue with these types of hardware incompatibility. I also have an ASUS laptop that won’t use their slightly weird speakers correctly and, again, that whole thing makes it much less practical to boot into Linux instead.
My guess is that somehow data left in ram is causing the driver to get screwy. However, that still wouldn’t make sense as it shouldn’t be using uninitialized memory.
I guess do a full power off before switching OS. The other option is to just run a Windows VM.
The other option is to just use Windows, which is the issue with these types of hardware incompatibility. I also have an ASUS laptop that won’t use their slightly weird speakers correctly and, again, that whole thing makes it much less practical to boot into Linux instead.