Yes, every time I tried to make everything work in one distro and installation, distro was broken at some time because of dependency conflicts. I gave up after a year. Pointless waste of time.
I made the offer before and I will make it again; I will pay a pretty high finder's fee for anyone who can demonstrate a fully working, one boot, one distro of Linux that will do what I have listed. Every time I asked for help on Linux forums, I was told I was too stupid to be using computers and should kill myself. I never found any help in any Linux forum. This was because I dared to point out the flaws of Linux as a fully working desk top OS.
And yes, I compiled my kernels, compiled my own version of software using whatever dependencies were necessary to try and make it compatible with my distro and it never worked in the end. If you are so sure you can get everything working that I have listed in the is thread on a properly supported Linux distro with all the software available in the native repository and will work on all of my hardware, I will pay you $1000. If you decide to take me up on this, I will supply a comprehensive list of all the software and hardware I use that works right now for me in Windows.
Sounds frustrating. I wouldn't bother with linux forums for questions like that. They usually just refer you to the wiki, which is good, but you often need to figure it out yourself and google related questions/problems.
I'm a noob at linux. As I said, I've primarily used and know Windows, but got tired of the scam that is M$FT and most paid software and their NSA backdoors. Don't want your money either. Also, only you can demonstrate that all those work, because only you have your exact setup/configuration.
I need full color calibration on multi monitors, Optimus video card technology support, Wacom support, room acoustic correction support, HP Laserjet CP1025NW support, Brother DC1512 support, Bluetooth audio support, Cinelerra, Gimp or much better, Blender, video and photo noise removal software, Open Office, Thunderbird, Firefox, a powerful 3d modeling CAD, music tacking and production software, DVD and Bluray playback, DVD and Bluray authoring
Haven't played around with multi monitor color calibrations but system wide color management comes default with gnome. I would recommend dispcalgui for color managment. You can have more control within a color managed program like gimp. There is a guide on the arch wiki on getting optimus to work. You might need a module for some devices. Optimus does work though, as proven with laptops with igpu and a dedicated gpu. Same thing with wacom, check out the guide. Just packages and maybe modules. Not sure what you mean by room acoustic correction. If you're outputting an analog signal then you need support in the device driver and perhaps the audio application. If digital then it's up to your receiver. I can't test printer compatibility because I don't have that hardware. If linux drivers aren't available from the manufacturer then it's kind of their fault that you can't get it up and running instantly. Generic configurations should be possible but I have no clue if they will allow for all features. Bluetooth audio as in a headset or wireless speakers? Might require some tinkering. I'm sure this is doable but have no way of testing it.
"Cinelerra, Gimp or much better, Blender, video and photo noise removal software, Open Office, Thunderbird, Firefox, a powerful 3d modeling CAD" These are all common programs, if your distro cannot function with these apps installed together, then I would trash it and not look back, because it's a piece of crap. I don't know of what you require in music production software, so I'll recommend audacity, which again you should have no problem with. From an enthusiasts perspective, windows seems better for media playback such as bluray. You have bundled filters/decoders and high quality renderers due to directx and everything that comes with it. That said, playing a dvd or bluray mux should be trivial with something like mpv. For authoring and other multimedia related questions I would check the doom9 forums.
I recommended Arch Linux (or similar like gentoo, etc.) for a reason. It comes bare minimum. The less stuff there is, and the less things the underlying code relies on to run stably, the less chance for conflicting packages or dependency problems. Getting your entire configuration running in linux isn't a 5 minute job unless you are familiar with how everything works and have expertise in doing it before. Configuring and messing around with linux is a great task when you're bored. Spend some free time if you have any / want to and try again. No point in changing your workflow just because you can to run on a different OS. But it shouldn't take a year to figure out if you can switch. Point is, linux should work for all setups, and is easier to work in once you get it going. Obviously there are complications with doing certain things or performing niche tasks, but there are solutions for everything. If there isn't a program, a driver or a module avaiable, then write your own