Intel WiFi drivers: pristine paradise with dolphins gracefully leaping through rainbows, everything works flawlessly out of the box. Realtek WiFi drivers: literal hellscape where SpongeBobs are running around in flames, nothing works, driver conflicts everywhere, and you're spending your Saturday recompiling kernel modules for the third time. The tragic part? Motherboard manufacturers keep slapping Realtek chips on everything because they're dirt cheap, while Intel WiFi cards are the premium option that actually respect your time and sanity. You'd think after decades of Linux users collectively screaming into the void about Realtek driver support, manufacturers would get the hint. But nope—here's another RTL8821CE that requires you to hunt down GitHub repos with sketchy DKMS modules just to connect to your router. Fun fact: Intel's wireless drivers have been mainlined into the Linux kernel for years with excellent support, while Realtek's idea of "Linux support" is dropping a tarball from 2015 and ghosting everyone.