For those who’re currently looking for a nice new device: shown are (from Top Left to Right):

  • NovaCustom (NL)
  • Star Labs (UK)
  • System76 (US)
  • Juno Computers (US)
  • UbuntuShop (BE)
  • Slimbook (ES)
  • Tuxedo Computers (DE)
  • Entroware (UK)
  • MiniFree (UK)
  • Nitrokey (DE)
  • Laptops with Linux (NL)
  • Purism (US)

Not mentioned but also selling Ready-to-use Linux computer:

  • Dell
  • Lenovo
  • @[email protected]
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    42 months ago

    some years ago it really was extremely hard. at least now there’s finally some solid shops.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 months ago

    Just got a HP pavilion for free. On the other side of everything here. Fucking want to go postal on them. Bios so fucked up I can’t get Linux to run with full disk encryption. Buggy, acpi errors. Support"not our problem it works with windows" …

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Had a elitebook for a while missing that one , would still be alive if it wasn’t because I spilled wine on it

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          Well, mine just fell apart. Now I have an old Latitude. As far as I know the business HP-s are decent, but consumer ones are already a rotting corpse when you buy them.

    • @[email protected]
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      42 months ago

      HP has been awful about that forever. I slapped Linux on one maybe 15 years ago and it was a nightmare

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I got a client to buy me a System76 (Pangolin), never would have bought one otherwise. Everything is great about it, very powerful and as expected, except for the BT/WiFi module. It’s kinda dogshit.

    Besides that, IO is plentiful, it’s a good size/weight, user upgradable/serviceable, has a hardware camera killswitch, and a built-in RJ45 to fix the WiFi issue. When I got mine, they were doing a special, and I also got a neat backpack with it for free!

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      except for the BT/WiFi module. It’s kinda dogshit.

      You can get external USB ones of those, which opens things up. Downside is that it’s another thing to carry, and you gotta plug it in when you sit down. Upside is that it lets you put the antenna wherever you want (which doesn’t matter much for Bluetooth, but can be nice for WiFi). Desktops these days with integrated BT/WiFi tend to have external antennas that you can place where you want, but laptops don’t have that option outside of USB.

      That being said, I’ve gotten several exotic USB WiFi adapters for which I needed to compile in support; support wasn’t packaged and in the base kernel. So given the context of the “just works” standpoint, that could be a tripping spot.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        Indeed, I got myself a mid-grade Netgear USB antenna. It works much better than on-board, but like you said it’s an extra thing with a wire. Doesn’t help with BT, but at least my mouse has an RF dongle for that.

        It’s just a bit of a bummer that the price is what it is and the BT/WiFi is one of the cheap components.

  • 𞋴𝛂𝛋𝛆
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    22 months ago
    These are great for certain use cases, but there are areas where volume is critical for economy of scale and we have no equivalent.

    Like with my disability and ergonomic needs I went looking for a laptop with an AI capable GPU. Also because building hardware is such a garbage marketing scam to navigate. I got a late- 16GB GPU model for $2k when all I could buy was a 12GB S76 for $3k5 or 16GB for $4k5+ and it had a 14k9 Intel with C4-roulette bomb built in.

    We are at a stage where it is insane that gaming is even relevant to GPU specs. The die used in almost all of these GPUs are not only capable of handing a lot more RAM, but the support for more RAM is actually already in the firmware and only configured by soldering the correct chips and changing a configuration resistor on the PCB. Most chips are more than capable of addressing the maximum memory that was available in the series. There are people posting on YT demonstrating this swap on multiple Nvidia cards. So either we must be able to buy a GPU with replaceable memory or hardware should be sold with the option for maximum. Gamers have no use for this, but it is super important for AI stuff. Like I was looking at getting some old P40 Tesla GPUs just because they have 24GB of ram but it would take 8 of them to have as much compute as my current single 16GB GPU on a laptop! I would love to buy a similar machine with something like a 48GB GPU in a 3090 or 4090 like class and with Tesla hardware that cannot be used for gaming. That absolutely cannot be some super rich, I-made-up-a-price boutique retailer bullshit. The existing hardware already supports this where something like a 5070 and 5060 are more than capable of shipping with 32GB of RAM attached. It is not super niche or stupid expensive to use chips that are a few dollars more each when the bulk of the cost is the same and already being spent. Sure my Tesla GPU laptop dream is edgy, but shipping a 32GB 5060 at economy of scale ~$2k is not. Even Nvidia should start classing dice and putting out AI specific specs if the bad blocks in a die permit just killing the ray tracing junk but can still do tensor math. These kinds of things are in the near future of possibility, but I don’t see anyone in the Linux space being particularly edgy and leading by offering something great. They are acting like boutique retail and charging premiums or offering mundane hardware for tried and true use cases.

    Anyways, I wanted to support S76 but paying twice as much, and when they do not open source their bootloader, it was a solid no for me. Fortunately https://linux-hardware.org/ exists and shows the kernel log and what works and does not work for almost all hardware that exists. Do a scan of your stuff to help others too, especially if you use esoteric stuff, unusual distros, or find some workaround to get hardware working when it did not work before. We don’t have very good economy of scale with edge case and enthusiast hardware, but this is a way around that.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    Just confirming the point about Lenovo. Bought a brand new Lenovo Legion last fall, and I didn’t even bother booting Windows once before I started from a Linux Mint install USB.

    After wrapping up the install, everything worked out of the box, including Lenovos hotkey for toggling the keyboard LEDs.

    I found out Lenovo has a copilot key (keycode 201). Yesterday I remapped it to running a shell script that toggles some keyboard parameters.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      Same for Dell; moreover, KDE actually features the respective indicators, so the laptop feels completely Linux-native

  • Liz
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    132 months ago

    Does Framework sell a laptop with Linux pre-installed or do they only have officially supported distros?

    • @[email protected]
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      112 months ago

      Ships with windows or blank disk (selectable). Ubuntu/mint/fedora are officially supported but you could install other distros like arch

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          Me too, and have done it in the past on one laptop that I did get with Linux when there was no bring-your-own option, but I suppose that OP’s got a point — there are people out there for whom installing the OS on a blank laptop is going to be intimidating.

          If you’ve installed an OS a zillion times, this is all old hat. If you never have before, probably feels kind of scary.

          For those people, having a preinstalled OS can be a significant value-add.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      You can buy no OS. Or even no included drive. You’ll save on having to pay the Windows license.

    • MynameisAllen
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      212 months ago

      Every 6 months I check to see if they’ve figured out VOLTE on PostmarketOS, or Sailfish (my dream OS tbh) on community ports. And then I cry and angrily tell people how Microsoft destroyed Meego until I’m told to hush

    • NatanoxOP
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      162 months ago

      The Software isn’t fully there yet for mass adoption (Your mileage may vary, but the general expectations for a modern daily driver are pretty high), at least not for anyone but enthusiasts and developers. If there’s something like a PinePhone 2 it will probably yet again designed to be relatively cheap despite low production volume, so as many potential developers as possible can afford one.

      • @[email protected]
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        152 months ago

        If it can handle my banking app (local credit union) and occasionally play YouTube I’m good tbh

        • @[email protected]
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          122 months ago

          A lot of financial apps require Play Protect and attestation. I had to fight for months to figure out how to spoof the integrity check so I could deposit some stupid checks.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            I have so much shit in place because of my root its ridiculous, Magisk + Modules, LSPosed, Shizuku (for those apps that detect if devtools is enabled), HideMyApplist and probably at least 2 more im forgetting

            • @[email protected]
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              32 months ago

              It honestly might be cheaper to get a piece of shit phone and keep it squeaky clean for our overlords

          • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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            12 months ago

            I was surprised that BlissOS (fork of Android x86) worked just fine with my bank’s app. But it still refuses to work when running it in VirtualBox. It has to be booted directly on the hardware.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          I get by pretty well just using my bank’s website. If you need the bank’s app for something like occasionally depositing checks, maybe you could keep your old phone in a drawer with your checkbook.

  • @[email protected]
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    32 months ago

    I think the issue is that this is the first I’ve heard of any of these companies besides dell and lenovo.

    Are the companies that sell these reaching their customer base?

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I have a GPD Win Max 2 2024 and it’s such an amazing device. Everything works ootb on Fedora, except the FP reader (but that’s already being worked on). Raytracing on a 10" device, what a time to be alive.

    It’s also very easy to disassemble, clean and repair.
    So GPD definitely wins in my book.

  • @[email protected]
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    412 months ago

    As much as I like my Tuxedo, I probably would not have bought it if I had known that the ethernet card and some laptop essentials dont work without their drivers, which have not been upstreamed. Due to this, I can’t use my distro of choice (Bluefin) OR run with secure boot and LUKS with tpm unlock even on regular Fedora

    • @[email protected]
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      72 months ago

      What Ethernet chip do they use?

      I’ve got a Framework 16 and all components work on both Fedora and Debian without installing custom drivers, so I’m surprised it’s still an issue for some laptops.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          I wonder why they didn’t go with something more supported, like a Realtek chip. They’re not the best (I’d prefer Intel or Aquantia), but they’re cheap and widely supported. The Framework’s Ethernet expansion card uses a RTL8156 which is supported practically everywhere.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 months ago

            They don’t design all of their laptops, so it’s not always up to them. They order off-the-shelf designs with their logo from Clevo or some other ODM and tweak the firmware.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 months ago

      Do you know if that’s still the case on their new systems?

      I’m currently waiting for next gen GPUs to become available and have been leaning towards Tuxedo

      • @[email protected]
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        122 months ago

        I’m using an Infinitybook Pro 14 gen 9. It came out last year.

        You will most likely need the “tuxedo-drivers” package, but whether you’ll need an ethernet driver too depends on the hardware they choose.

        At least they publish their drivers for both RPM and DEB systems, so that makes it a bit less painful.

        Of course, none of this applies if you use their distro. There, everything is pre-installed and configured for their laptops