I’m looking for an Apple MacBook Air M2 alternative that could run Linux.

I need something fanless, super lightweight with very long battery life. The only apps I use are Shotcut video editor, Chrome and Firefox.

Any advice?

Is it a good idea to get a MacBook Air m2 and use something like Asahi Linux or should I wait for arm linux laptops to become available.

  • BennyHill500 [comrade/them]
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    101 year ago

    the Surface Go tablets and some of the older Surface pros are fanless but you will have nowhere near the performance of a M1/2 air

    • Dariusmiles2123
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      41 year ago

      I have a Surface Go 1 and I’m perfectly happy except for some mouse/bluetooth issues.

      It’s not powerful but it works perfectly for the browsing or writing that I’m doing.

  • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]
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    41 year ago

    There are some purpose-built ARM Linux laptops available but as an owner of an unused Pinebook Pro… can’t recommend agony-deep

    Walking the path of a PC hater is not easy

  • AggressivelyPassive
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    131 year ago

    How about Chromebooks?

    You can put Linux on most of them and they’re perfectly capable of (even designed for) running Chrome and Firefox.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    I bought a used gen1 Thinkpad X1 Nano. It is super light (<1kg), works flawless out of the box with Linux, and while I think it does have a fan I’ve never noticed it.

  • @[email protected]
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    201 year ago

    I use asahi on a MacBook air, and love it. The battery life on sleep mode has been improving but it’s nowhere near the voodoo Apple does to MacOs. I recently installed Linux on my Asus machine and found the process and community to be really helpful, so maybe that’s an option for you. Check out https://asus-linux.org/

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        That’s awesome. My Asus uses a bit more I think but I never measured it. The MacBook air used to die in one day in sleep mode and now it’ll last almost two days, so progress!

  • Aniki 🌱🌿
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    41 year ago

    My 2021 XPS 13" is quad core i7, 32gb of ram, 1tb nvme, 5k touch screen, running arch. 3-4 hours battery life. Nothing close to Apple but power in linux is always a crapshoot.

  • @[email protected]
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    121 year ago

    I don’t like apple as a company and their attitude towards repair makes it so i feel obligated to never recommend one of their products, but if you need it to be fanless, a macbook air is prolly your only really good option, honestly though an m1 should be just fine (I’m assuming your video editing workloads are pretty light), also i recommend checking out Just Josh on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtHm9ai5zSb-yfRnnUBopAg, he has some great laptop reviews

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I had the Pinebook Pro. It was pretty good, solidly built, had a 1080p screen and could handle Openshot video editor, web browsing and video playback. All I needed.

    I didn’t have it hooked up to an external display but according to the website it can handle 4K playback. Mainly used it for listening to music in Cmus whilst browsing in Firefox.

    Battery life was pretty good, about 10 hours IIRC but mine just stopped booting after I left the battery dead for a few months.

    Might buy another one though https://pine64.com/product-category/pinebook-pro/

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    51 year ago

    Chromebooks or macbooks are your best bet. I believe top of the line Chromebooks are actually very good. If you put Linux on them they’ll be very capable.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      Don’t buy a Chromebook for linux. While driver support usually isn’t an issue, the alternative keyboard layout is terrible for most applications. To even get access to all of the normal keys that many applications expect you need to configure multi-key shortcuts which varies in complexity based on your DE. In most cases it will also void your warranty because of the custom firmware requirement.

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    I have a fanless, reasonably-light linux laptop from tuxedo. Unfortunately, it seems their current models are more powerful, more heavy and probably not fanless.

    Did you consider dell xps or system76?

    • wingsfortheirsmiles
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      31 year ago

      It’s not fanless but I was also thinking of the Lemur Pro. Apparently System76 will be bringing out a new design though next month

    • mFatOP
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      21 year ago

      A couple of friends recommended Dell XPS. I’ll check it out. Thanks!

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        They aren’t fanless, but I really love my XPS. Setting aside GPU related tasks (obv) this is the fastest thing I’ve ever sat in front of, by a wide margin. FWIW even at max the fans are audible but not ever loud. Maybe if you were working in a silent bank vault or something they would be, but in what I consider normal day to day usage they are never even close to an issue. For non-intensive tasks I don’t hear them at all.

        I have this system because by a crazy circumstance I was able to get it for nearly free in like-new condition. I would likely not have spent full price just because I don’t have that kind of cash around most of the time. I absolutely love it. FWIW if you look at one of the others with the same chassis/keyboard design you’ll find some repeating criticisms in the reviews - I’ve found most of them to be understandable but non-issues in the real world, so let me know if you have questions. Obv all depends on your use case…

        The one thing I wish is that this was the 32GB model - but again, the price was very right. If I was buying that’s what I’d go for. 16GB is plenty most of the time, but not all the time.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I think most people don’t realize this but Apple Silicon is a quantum leap in computing. The only company that can achieve that kind of both power and efficiency is Apple. I say this as a proud Apple hater.

    “Fanless” is mostly unheard of otherwise. Maybe some ARM SBCs but those are also very low powered.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Apple silicon is in no way a ‘quantum leap’ over anything. Even arm’s general efficiency in low power situations diminish as it enters ultrabook territory

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        And yet Apple Silicon competes with the best Windows Ultrabooks in existence while using 1/3 the power…

        • @[email protected]
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          71 year ago

          Where did you pull that from? Both amd and Intel has 20W class cpus that compete with base m-series cpus while being based on older nodes

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              OK it seems all ‘15W’ cpus from those brands boost much higher so the wattages aren’t as good as I thought but here are some that still compete:

              M3 - 3nm, 20W
              Amd 7840U - 4nm, 30W, 15% slower on single thread and 20% faster on multi thread.
              Intel 1365U - 10nm, 25-55W, 15% slower on multi thread

              • aard
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                11 year ago

                AMD can compete in performance and power/Watt mid to high load, but is shit with low load efficiency. intel has nothing at all. Apple scales nicely over the complete range.

                If you want a relatively small notebook with lots of RAM you also don’t have options (not really AMDs fault, but hardware manufacturers seem to produce mostly shit now). Framework is pretty much the only somewhat decent option with 64GB max, if you want more there’s pretty much only apple - which is way overcharging for that.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Because it doesn’t use x86. It also costs twice as much compared to other arm based laptops, because Apple.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Because it doesn’t use x86.

            …and?

            It also costs twice as much

            Also and…? We’re not talking about price, we’re talking about effiency.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              I guess I need to be more clear.

              The reason it’s more efficient is because it doesn’t use x86. This is not exclusive to Apple. You can buy arm laptops elsewhere.

              The reason it costs twice as much is because it is Apple. This is exclusive to Apple.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                The reason it’s more efficient is because it doesn’t use x86.

                Repeating yourself is not being more clear.

                This is not exclusive to Apple. You can buy arm laptops

                If there are other ARM laptops that compete on power and efficiency, I’d very much like to learn more about them. Can you share?

                The reason it costs twice as much is because it is Apple. This is exclusive to Apple.

                The price is exclusive for a number of reasons but certainly in no small part due to unparalleled power and efficiency.

                • @[email protected]
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                  21 year ago

                  If there are other ARM laptops that compete on power and efficiency, I’d very much like to learn more about them. Can you share?

                  ThinkPad X13s

    • @[email protected]
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      181 year ago

      The only company that can achieve that kind of efficiency is Apple. I say this as a proud Apple hater.

      It is not about efficiency, we already know for some time that x86 is not really efficient compared to newer architectures like arm and risc.

      But no other ecosystem exists that can force such an architecture move without much much more problems.

      So i would rephrase it as “The only company that can force that kind of fundamental change on its user and developers is Apple”

      I am not saying it is a bad thing (just alone the rosetta translate layer is actually really impressive). Would love to have some actually good and mainstream arm options such as Linux Laptop.

      • aard
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        11 year ago

        Microsoft is trying the same - but royally screwing up how they deal with hardware partners. Performance wise the snapdragons they use are roughly a decade behind what Apple is doing - I have both systems for work projects.

        The x86 emulation in Windows is imo better solved than rosetta - but the rest of the stack is a mess. For example, the deployment tools only got arm support a few months ago.

        And Linux support on those things sucks - while using it on the M1 is great.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Snapdragon Elite is going to be a rather sizeable step forward, thanks to the Nuvia purchase. Windows on ARM exclusivity is also going to end in 2025, and apparently both AMD and Nvidia are going to have chips ready. I’m hoping Lenovo and/or Dell will put some effort into Linux support once we have better chips, and that the likes of System76, Framework, and Starlabs are able to release ARM models.

  • @[email protected]
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    161 year ago

    the m1 is fine with asahi. i don’t personally own one but i’ve worked on em in the past and its getting better by the day still.

    idk about the m2 but it seems fine. people complain about the battery life being worse on asahi.

    it’s gonna be years before arm laptops in general hit the scene in a big way and they’ll have the same problems that smartphones and sbcs have (weird non mainline kernel support, etc).

    that’s not to say it isn’t happening, just that it’s happening slowly. you want to be in the big common platform as the transition to arm happens and like it or not, that’s apple.

    if i were you i’d get the m2 and dual boot asahi. when its broke you still got the apple os that works fine.

    • PaX [comrade/them, they/them]
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      1 year ago

      Rip out the fan and connect the processor heatsink to a heatpipe

      Then carry around a cup of water to dip the heatpipe into

      This is not a bit, I am a real hardware designer

  • @[email protected]M
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    1 year ago

    I have an M1 MBA and it runs Asahi just fine, for the most part. And it should suit you well too, since you’re only going to use basic apps. Even if there are some limitations currently, you could always run Linux inside a VM such as UTM.

    But may I ask why do you want to run Linux, when you’re going to use only those three apps? Objectively, Linux wouldn’t be offering you much in your use case, and in fact if battery life is your primary concern, you’d be better off sticking with macOS. Another option could be a Chromebook.

    • ReallyZen
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      1 year ago

      I use Asahi too, and at the moment the killing factor is battery depletion while sleeping (50% a day!). Performance wise, working with kdenlive is about on par with an i7 12th gen Intel chip (direct comparison between Thinkpad X1 i7 16g ram 2023 and mbp m2pro 16g ram) - nothing close to the power macos can leverage from the m chip but still perfectly usable. But frustrating in a way.

      If you install Asahi, it will be dualboot by default - why not trying it out? The install process is a delight, very well explained.

      As for hardware, the Air is pretty unique. There are other fanless stuff out there, but it’s gonna be cheap netbooks without the power to handle video work.

      I’d say give Asahi a try ; I love booting mine in front of people and looking at their confused faces when I spin the cube to move a wobbly window around (Though the big Fedora logo at startup is a bit of a giveaway)!

      Edit: also, you already own the hardware. Stop wasting money/resources, jut make it do what you want.

    • @[email protected]
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      391 year ago

      But may I ask why do you want to run Linux

      If I had to guess, it’s because Linux doesn’t suck.

    • mFatOP
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      31 year ago

      Thanks. I want to run linux because that’s what I’ve used for the past 15 years :) The company I work for has provided us with intel Macbooks, but rarely use it. Instead i do all my work using my own Thinkbook 14s Yoga running Fedora.