Which are your preferred laptops?
from foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml to linux@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 06:43
https://lemmy.ml/post/16819663

Hey, I wanna know your preferred laptops, used is better and to run Linux on it. Something with at least 16gb and 512 SSD is good. Budget range. Thank you!

#linux

threaded - newest

JASN_DE@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 06:46 next collapse

I’ve had good experiences with most modern Dell Laptops. Also Thinkpads. What’s “budget range” to you?

foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 06:46 collapse

Wouldn’t go really beyond 600 bucks And old or new thinkpads?

Zikeji@programming.dev on 13 Jun 07:03 collapse

New ish. My current Thinkpad is a P14s Gen 1 with a Ryzen 4750U 16GB of RAM, and it came with a 512GB SSD. I paid just under $300 for it on eBay and well worth the cost. I wouldn’t get anything that is still a TXXX variant anymore though (e g. T490), they simplified the product line. So T490 was replaced by the E14 Gen 1, and the P14s Gen 1 is an AMD variant.

Highly recommend. One thing worth noting though is to double check the fingerprint reader if you desire that, the E14 Gen 1 has a reader not compatible with Linux in a functional way. The P14s Gen 1 however does.

foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 07:11 next collapse

And do you a t14 is worthing it?

Zikeji@programming.dev on 13 Jun 23:19 collapse

I haven’t used a T14, just the E14 and the P14S.

MalReynolds@slrpnk.net on 13 Jun 07:19 collapse

Fingerprint readers are definitely hit or miss… If you care make sure it was originally specced for linux (usually at least Red Hat), then you’re probably good for any distro.

Zikeji@programming.dev on 13 Jun 23:20 collapse

They’re pretty insecure anyway, my current P14s Gen1 has a working fingerprint reader on Silverblue but I haven’t really used it.

Dirk@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 06:50 next collapse

If you’re on a small budget, look for older ThinkPad laptops, you can get them for good prices and in good condition and Linux works very well on them.

For mid-range try to find an older Dell XPS 13, they sold those as certified Linux devices nicknamed “Developer Edition” and with an Ubuntu LTS version preinstalled. I have one of those and I run Arch on it. It runs perfectly fine. Also: superb build quality! It’s a very great device.

foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 06:53 next collapse

Thx

gnuhaut@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 07:13 next collapse

Not all Thinkpads work equally well. For the best experience, get an all-Intel one, from one of the more expensive business lines, like the T-series. Consumer models are definitely worse, because employees of big Linux-using tech firms are getting the pro models.

foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 07:15 next collapse

So it’s preferable to take a x, p or t series?

Sunny@slrpnk.net on 13 Jun 08:38 next collapse

I personally went with a P15 model and have been beyond happy with mine. Got that numpad too 🙌

gnuhaut@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 09:38 next collapse

I haven’t kept up with all the various lines they’re up to now, but that looks about right. Also obviously doesn’t hurt to google the exact model. Someone I know got an old tabletty Thinkpad with a touchscreen (don’t know what model) and on that one the webcam doesn’t work on Linux, so something like that can happen.

rostselmasch@lemmygrad.ml on 13 Jun 11:33 collapse

I bought an E595 back then and it works great. But I dont know how the actual E series behave. There werent also no problems at all with Linux. More important is the question which wifi module you choose, and mine had one from realtek (there were no Intel Option sadly) and the wifi performance wasnt that great because of that.

sping@lemmy.sdf.org on 13 Jun 11:44 collapse

What problems with AMD Ryzen? I’ve been happy with them, except one that had excessive power drain on suspend.

gnuhaut@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 20:51 collapse

Maybe it’s fine with now, but I looked into a Ryzen Thinkpad a couple of years ago and Linux users reported problems with something (maybe power management?).

MalReynolds@slrpnk.net on 13 Jun 07:19 collapse

Also note that Thinkpads up to a couple of years ago (when soldering RAM became a thing) are mostly trivial to open and upgrade RAM / drives, so you don’t have to care about those and can pick up a bargain (look to T480 at the moment (not the TN screen tho), or whatever is 3 years or so old, as that’s the corporate fleets that are getting dumped onto the market).

lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network on 23 Jun 16:28 collapse

And decently easy to repair / have repaired at a computer shop, wether its the battery, RAM, CPU, keyboard, screen, or any and I mean ANY of the external connectors!

elminuto@metalhead.club on 13 Jun 06:49 next collapse

@foremanguy92_
Not that cheap, but very good and 100% linux compatible:
https://www.tuxedocomputers.com/de/TUXEDO-Pulse-14-Gen4.tuxedo

stuckgum@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 07:11 next collapse

I have heard mixed opinions about this brand, are they really that good?

elminuto@metalhead.club on 13 Jun 07:43 next collapse

@stuckgum I bought a PC there ~six years ago and a Laptop ~3 years ago. Both are still runnig quite good, no hardware or linux based problems. Only with windows in dualboot... 😉️
I had once contact to the service (windows dualboot...) and they could help me quick.
So the only thing I could complain about would be the price.

alfenstein@beehaw.org on 13 Jun 13:21 next collapse

I bought a tuxedo laptop about 2 years ago. I’ve only had one issue with it, where it would go to 100% fan speed for about 2 seconds after turning it on. Other than that I’m really happy with it ☺️

qpsLCV5@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 13:46 next collapse

i bought the tuxedo nano (a mini pc but decently powerful), and its not 100% linux compatible. i imagine its better if you install their own distro (maybe) but running arch linux with the standard kernel on it, i’ve had issues with HPET/TSC (some cpu timekeeping stuff, ruined performance when it happened), the wifi card it came with is known to have issues and i’ve had plenty (usable, but super slow bandwidth depending on what AP i connect to, and no its not the AP all other devices work fine on it), and some lockups when my usb microphone is connected (sometimes it only crashed the usb hub which i could reset).

NONE of these issues are present running arch linux on my old desktop and 2 work laptops. Support wasnt helpful either.

However, its still my main device, i just had to work around these issues.

edit oh, and the fan is not controllable from linux at all, i’ve spent hours trying to find a way. i do not know if it’s controllable from windows either, maybe it’s just the mainboard that doesn’t allow fan control at all outside of the UEFI settings.

Nisaea@lemmy.sdf.org on 21 Jun 06:30 collapse

I did have a couple of issues with a model with an nvidia video card, but the tuxedo tech I got in contact with took great care to troubleshoot the issue with me and report the issue up to the Dev team that works with nvidia. So compatibility may not be 100% but the service is great. Now I got no more issues with it.

spankinspinach@sh.itjust.works on 13 Jun 07:51 collapse

In a similar vein, I went with a Framework laptop. Expensive, but 100% modular and repairable, with an in-house secondhand marketplace. I have a gen 1, batch 2, and the thing is stunningly manufactured for a startup. Can’t say enough good things. Happy hunting!

Guenther_Amanita@slrpnk.net on 13 Jun 06:53 next collapse

This may be an unpopular opinion, but you can use pretty much anything you like, as long as it isn’t brand new or extremely old.
Even stuff with Nvidia GPUs and stuff.
Even MS Surface devices work decently.

Thing is, for a really smooth experience, where you don’t feel like a second class citizen, and everything works ootb, proper support is advantageous.

I have a Dell XPS laptop, and it works fine. Sometimes, the WiFi switches itself off, and I have to restart the connection, but other than that, everything is flawless.
Thinkpads are great too, since they are also used heavily in offices, where they get thrown out or sold cheaply. Maybe ask there.

I personally would recommend something that you can repair yourself, or at least change the battery and memory.

foremanguy92_@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 06:57 next collapse

Thank you

regnskog@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 07:08 collapse

I wouldn’t recommend macs in general. Anything with a touch bar (intels from ca 2018-19 and on) are tricky to get to run Linux at all, anything with apple silicon is very experimental, and the older models have Broadcom Wi-Fi that doesn’t ship with drivers on any distribution I know of.

regnskog@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 07:10 next collapse

This is a pity because MacBooks pro from ca 2013-2015 are great; cheap second hand because they’re out of support in macOS, good screens, excellent build quality and fast enough for anything you want to do with them.

rotopenguin@infosec.pub on 13 Jun 19:04 collapse

They’re cheap because the battery is just about old enough to become a danger pillow.

regnskog@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:52 collapse

Sure, but a new battery isn’t that expensive

heyixen815@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 13 Jun 16:10 collapse

Not entirely true, I’m running Ubuntu on MBP 2017 (non-Touchbar). WiFi works out of the box, only touchbar models have problems. They are using another antenna. Only thing that doesn’t work out of the box are FaceTime webcam and sound. There are drivers for those. One thing to note tho, Intel MBP especially those thin ones can get very hot and fans might blast.

regnskog@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:51 collapse

Thanks! I thought the problem was the T2 chip and I thought the non touchbar macs had them too, but it’s been a while since I looked into this. I have a machine with a broken touchbar that could plausibly run something that isn’t macOS and was very disappointed when I realised I essentially had to install special distros with some kernel patch or something on it.

NeoNachtwaechter@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 09:32 next collapse

I prefer to have no laptop at all (but I guess you didn’t want to hear that)

Presi300@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 09:48 next collapse

I am gonna get a shit ton of hate for this… MacBook air. Yes, I am on a Linux sublemmy, saying that I like macs but the hardware is just too good to justify spending money on a x86 laptop.

Though, those new snapdragon X Elite laptops do look pretty spicy… Too bad they weren’t yet announced when I bought my Mac.

JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 16:35 collapse

Thats not budget though, the cheapest macbook is £750

Presi300@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 22:48 collapse

you can get em for pretty cheap used

JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 23:16 collapse

I’m talking about the refurbished ones.

mojoaar@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 10:15 next collapse

Are running 2 Dell’s at home with Linux desktop on them. A 7280 and a 7480 model. Support for drivers etc just works. Dell get’s A+ from me in regards to ease of use with support for Linux. HP’s, not so much - what a struggle…

TCB13@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 20:29 collapse

HP EliteBook 840 G5 or another EliteBook model. Even on Debian everything works fine after a clean install (including special keys), they never die and have a pleasant design.

mojoaar@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 06:01 collapse

We are using 845 G8/9/10/11 (AMDs) at work and from my testing with Ubuntu 22.04 LTS I have the opposite experience - nothing works. First problem as I recall (+1 year since I tested) was wifi driver problems.

TCB13@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:45 collapse

Maybe that’s a specific Ubuntu thing?

mojoaar@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 12:57 collapse

Maybe - but I seem to recall also checking out Debian testing also = no joy.

Veraxis@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 10:54 next collapse

I cannot say that I have done extensive testing, but the Acer Swift 315-51G and Gigabyte Aero WV8 that I have both worked fine with Linux with zero prior research on my part. No issues with any drivers, even the SD card readers, although I have not checked the fingerprint sensor on the Acer. Maybe I have just been lucky.

Both have hybrid Nvidia graphics, though, and 10-series and prior hybrid graphics especially, as I understand, have issues with high idle power usage unless you manually disable the dGPU when not gaming, which I had to do using envycontrol and nearly doubled my battery life on both. I might avoid hybrid dGPUs and especially older ones unless you need that.

Used laptop-wise, I agree with others that a used business laptop like a Dell would probably be your best bet.

eugenia@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 11:24 next collapse

When it comes to expensive laptops, there are plenty of good options for Linux. But for cheaper stuff, your best bet might be a second hand DELL, a model that specifically says that it supports Linux (newer models use some new Intel webcams etc that don’t have support on linux yet).

Frederic@beehaw.org on 13 Jun 11:30 next collapse

Few years old Dell laptop, they are incredible, even easy to open and repair, parts available everywhere, BIOS update even after 5 or 6 years.

You can buy a few years old Latitude for maybe $200, 14", i5 8th gen, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD, wifi, bt, webcam, usb-c, name it.

Being 8th gen it runs win11, but they also run Linux pretty well, I’m running MX Linux (debian based) on them and everything is supported.

example www.ebay.ca/itm/115672158079

rodbiren@midwest.social on 13 Jun 12:00 next collapse

I have an old Lenovo W550s Thinkpad with a 2GB Dedicated Nvidia and an i5 5500U. It’s got two batteries and sips power. It’s only 4 cores, but for what I run it does great. I get fairly consistent 60fps on low settings for “boomer shooters” like Selaco. The thing is an absolute beast and hardly flexes. The plastic is cracked and I can just hand it to my kids without a care in the world. Dump a drink on it, drop it, I could care less. I had them help me change out the RAM and SSD because it’s essentially bound for the dumpster and any value I get out of it is the cherry on top.

That and I can run pretty much and retro gaming console on it to about the Wii/GameCube, which blows my mind. All for probably like $200 of hardware.

xenspidey@lemmy.zip on 13 Jun 12:17 next collapse

“Couldn’t care less”

CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 15:00 collapse

I’m on my second Lenovo in a row, they seem to be really good for Linux. Actually the previous one did get a drink dumped on it too, and it didn’t phase it at all. The 5 key is a little sticky sometimes but otherwise works fine.

I might be tempted to get a Framework for my next one though, if I can get the cash together for a 16.

darkfiremp3@beehaw.org on 13 Jun 12:25 next collapse

I wanted a thin and light laptop for travel, I was looking between an X1 Carbon 9th gen, or a HP dragonfly gen 2, I ended up scoring a HP with a i5-1145g7, 16gb lpddr4 for $275 on eBay.

rImITywR@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 13:02 next collapse

A “factory seconds” framework 13 might fit your budget, and you get a laptop that is easily repairable and upgradeable. The 11th gen i7 version that starts at $500 is what I have been using for a couple of years now and still runs great.

They also have refurbished laptops, but those seem to start a little bit more expensive.

carzian@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 13:50 collapse

Love my 11th gen framework, but there is an issue with the 11th gens where the CMOS battery will die rather quickly. If it does die then the laptop needs to be plugged in to turn on, even if it is fully charged. Framework is aware of the issue and will send a free replacement battery or, if you can solder, a mod that will eliminate the issue for good.

Still love framework and would definitely recommend them - but the 11th gen line (their first product) has a few gotchas

randombullet@programming.dev on 14 Jun 08:14 next collapse

I often skip first gens hence why I got a 12th gen and then upgraded it to a 7040 series. Super happy with the battery life and performance.

ams@lemmy.ml on 14 Jun 10:43 collapse

I’m thinking about buying a Framework 13 myself, but I worry the keyboard will be a huge downgrade on my current ThinkPad T480. Are the Framework keyboards any good?

carzian@lemmy.ml on 14 Jun 15:08 collapse

I have no complaints with the framework keyboard, is there a particular issue you’re concerned about? The track pad is almost apple quality. Certainly better than most laptops I’ve used.

ams@lemmy.ml on 16 Jun 08:22 collapse

ams

No concerns, just that a bad keyboard can completely ruin a laptop for me (XPS being one). It’s all subjective I guess. After posting the above I came across an entire thread on the subject, most saying the keyboard is good enough. Anyway, I ordered a Framework 13 after reading those comments. Thanks for the reply.

[deleted] on 13 Jun 13:24 next collapse

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Roopappy@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 13:39 next collapse

Dell Latitude 5000 series are usually bought by corporations for employees. They are made of sturdy metal, and have features like backlit keyboards and physical trackpad buttons. Then, after 2-3 years, or if they have some minor problem, they end up in a giant stack that either never gets diagnosed, or just gets sent to recycling.

I have had fantastic luck getting a couple of these either direct from the company I’m working for, or from ebay or a company that recycles laptops. They usually don’t actually have a problem, and if they do, parts are readily available on ebay. You can end up with a high-spec laptop from just a few years ago for practically nothing.

SteelCorrelation@lemmy.one on 13 Jun 13:47 next collapse

ThinkPads are my go-to. I just got an X1 Carbon Gen 9 (i5, 16GB) for $350 and put Fedora on it after upgrading the SSD to 1TB. It’s a beautiful laptop.

Of course, there’s the tried and true T480. Love that thing, especially if you get the right display panel and touchpad upgrades. Swappable batteries, upgradeable RAM. Those laptops can be had for cheap on eBay. Also check r/hardwareswap or the Discord for ThinkPad deals.

XPS 13 units can do well with Linux, too. I’m just a ThinkPad fan.

illectrility@sh.itjust.works on 13 Jun 14:28 next collapse

Definitely. I got a T470s that had barely been used for business purposes on eBay for 100€. It’s a great machine. Lots of I/O, great IPS touchscreen, great backlit keyboard, great trackpad, great build quality, awesome form factor, good battery life (about 6-8 hours). If you need a cheap laptop, get a used ThinkPad. They’re the best bang for the buck imo

Blursty@lemmygrad.ml on 13 Jun 14:38 next collapse

What kind of battery life do you get out of it? I have the Gen 7 and from day one it’s been awful. About 4 hours brand new.

jcarax@beehaw.org on 13 Jun 17:20 next collapse

I’ve been wanting to find an alternative to Thinkpads since Lenovo bought them, but despite them not being what they used to be, I just haven’t been happy with any alternatives. I’m hopeful for Framework improving on their modularity, and the System76 in-house design that’s in the works has me intrigued.

Right now I’m looking forward to their eventual redesign of the Z series. I doubt they’ll do it, but I’d love a light workstation class version of the Z16, with slightly higher end graphics, and a vapor chamber. I’m also hopeful that they work on Linux support for their ARM offerings, and bring back the X13s that they offered with Snapdragon 8 a couple years back.

[deleted] on 14 Jun 05:37 next collapse

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frazorth@feddit.uk on 14 Jun 05:38 collapse

I only had bad experiences with an XPS, then I found out that the Linux model was a cut down version so that Dell didnt have to support the fingerprint reader and other gadgets.

Lenovo at the time were working with Fedora to get all their fingerprint drivers upstreamed so the choice seemed obvious.

AMD T14 Gen 2, and it’s still great.

Cyber@feddit.uk on 13 Jun 16:50 next collapse

Anything that’s not an HP…

I don’t know what it is with them, but I always have problems with their hardware - generally. Printers, laptops, anything…

But I definitely +1 all the Dell comments

TCB13@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 20:28 collapse

Did you ever try an EliteBook? Even on Debian everything works fine after a clean install (including special keys), they never die and have a pleasant design.

limelight79@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 16:57 next collapse

I bought a Lenovo about 2 years ago that I’ve been really happy with. I wanted something with a metal shell because I carry my laptop around sometimes and use it balanced on one hand, and my previous Dell (plastic) started flexing and having weird issues with the TouchPad as a result. The Lenovo has been solid. I’m running Kubuntu on it, but my plan is to go Debian at some point.

lemmyvore@feddit.nl on 13 Jun 18:02 collapse

I also have a Lenovo E16 G1 and it’s great. Everything worked out of the box (Manjaro and XFCE) and that’s pretty much all there is to say about it.

gerryflap@feddit.nl on 13 Jun 17:17 next collapse

I bought a ThinkPad new in 2014 for my study for like 1200 euro’s. She’s still happily purring today. Around 2019 I made the mistake of emptying a cup of tea into the ThinkPad accidentally and then holding it upside down to get the water out. I think I should’ve just let it leak out of the bottom since the laptop has holes for that, but I panicked. This broke the keyboard, but not the rest of the laptop. I got an official new keyboard for like 100 euro’s which came with a tool and the simple instructions, and since then everything has been working flawlessly.

So I recommend ThinkPads, although I can’t really say anything about compatibility of new models

juliebean@lemm.ee on 13 Jun 17:17 next collapse

i like my laptop cause i already have it, and have gotten to know it quite well over the past 16 years, but i wouldn’t recommend it. it would be nice to have more than 4gb of memory these days, cause i can’t have too many tabs open on firefox without it bogging down.

SeikoAlpinist@slrpnk.net on 13 Jun 19:21 next collapse

I used to prefer ThinkPads but I’ve moved on. I have had lots of reliability problems with them over the past few years. I had keys fall off a newer ThinkPad keyboard (which wasn’t user replaceable) and another new ThinkPad just die under warranty and the repair person damaged it further when trying to fix it.

I am on System76 now and have no issues and they do good things like right to repair and Coreboot.

If I had to choose a single laptop for everything, it would be the Toughbook 40. I have one for work and it has a 1200 nit display. It runs Ubuntu LTS perfectly. It costs several thousand dollars new but has swapable components, multiple batteries, and part availability is measured in decades. You can get an older CF-31 or CF-54 for a few hundred dollars and still find new components for it.

bloodfart@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 20:18 next collapse

Thinkpads, macs and dells are what I use.

They’re cheap and have lots of spare parts lying around.

Jayb151@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 21:37 collapse

Plus one for Dell. I get some 4 year old decommissioned dells from my company and a 5300 is now my daily driver

TCB13@lemmy.world on 13 Jun 20:28 next collapse

HP EliteBook 840 G5 or other EliteBook models. Even on Debian everything works fine after a clean install (including special keys), they never die and have a pleasant design. You can get one second hand, modern i7 (8th gen +) CPU + 16 GB of RAM for around 500€.

Daan@feddit.nl on 13 Jun 20:51 next collapse

My HP envy x360 AMD with Fedora here. Build quality is really good and the laptop has a nice design.

Bitrot@lemmy.sdf.org on 13 Jun 22:08 collapse

I’ve been a ThinkPad fan for a long time, but their new stuff bothers me. I picked up the HP DevOne which is essentially an Elitebook and I really like it. Very user serviceable and solid. The only think I don’t like is the glossy screen, and when playing around and configuring another model I think it was difficult to tell if it was matte or glossy through their marketing speak.

BaumGeist@lemmy.ml on 13 Jun 20:53 next collapse

I have 2 lenovos (ideapad and yoga) and a pinebook. I’m happy with all of them, though I’m happiest with the pinebook and yoga’s impressive battery lives

eddanja@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 01:49 next collapse

I just bought the Slimbook Executive and although there’s I’m not a fan of the charger, it’s a beast.

anarchoilluminati@hexbear.net on 14 Jun 06:36 next collapse

I like running Linux on my Lenovo Ideapad. It wasn’t expensive and has everything I want, including easily running Linux.

The only thing is it’s not a popular laptop so it doesn’t have accessories, like cases or whatever.

jeena@piefed.jeena.net on 14 Jun 10:02 next collapse

I was always happy with everything I got from Lenovo (mostly ThinkPads but also IdeaPad), both cheap ones, used and new ones, always worked without any problems.

I'm ok with the XPS 13 from Dell but I had some problems, they needed to replace the motherboard and when you hold it it bends a bit and does register a click on the touchpad.

I hated my Tuxedo laptop, very expensive and very bad quality, had to send it in to repair twice and after a year I gave up on it because it was so broken and bought a used ThinkPad.

Akareth@lemmy.world on 14 Jun 13:50 next collapse

In the past, ThinkPads, but my next one will probably be an ARM-based one for the performance and power efficiency (e.g. Snapdragon X Elite).

0x2d@lemmy.ml on 16 Jun 09:23 collapse

there is a x13s arm thinkpad that can run pmos and other distros

its also snapdragon based

ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Jun 14:49 collapse

My “budget” until my new laptop was “hey you just got a new pc? What was wrong with your old one? Slow as hell? Can I buy it cheap and tinker?”

Friends/family always give me the best price especially when they think it’s just “too old” and think I’m crazy, they don’t know the problem is windows.