brent you never did say if this was a standalone usb with the solus iso burned right on it. or ventoy.
- The USB is a non-ventoy standalone, which I've used many times for both installing Solus in its various iterations, or for some distro-hopping on my older machine. It's a novelty disk-on-key based on the "Transistor" from the Supergiant Games game of the same name, and has never given me trouble before.
As mentioned earlier, though I did try a different media just in case, this one with Rhino Linux' Live ISO on it, which I've used successfully to install said distro on a Microsoft Surface Pro 6 - so I assume the media are not at fault here.
Still - when I get around to trying again with a newer kernel ISO, I'll be able to verify this.
As for a review of System76 hardware, I'm really quite happy with it
- My laptop is a 17" Gazelle - at the time this was the only laptop available in their return-from-covid store.
The model is something of a beast: heavy and, when the nVidia card is used a little noisy, but has amazing performance. It still runs the Pop!_os it came with, mostly without issues. - The new Thelio Mira which is the reason for this topic, being a new machine, is quite a leap from my previous one.
The performance is extraordinary.
The casing has good points and bad: There's a special slot-and-rail arrangement for easily adding and removing 2.5" SSD cards, but if you want to plug in an older HDD (say, for transferring data from the older machine) or disconnecting one of the M.2 drives (say, in order to install an OS on one without making changes to the other) it gets much more complicated, as the construction used for housing the graphics card prevents access to the motherboard. They have a guide on their site for how circumvent this construction safely, but it is out of date and doesn't match the newer machines.
Also, the snazzy outer wrap-around chassis must be in place in order to switch the machine on - so no more tweaking with an exposed-innards machine for me.
All-in-all, a pretty good balance of aesthetic/functionality, if one doesn't feel the need to muck around with the inner hardware too much.