On Tue, Feb 08, 2011 at 03:09:23PM -0700, Bob Proulx wrote: > The IBM ThinkPads were always solid equipment and all of the hardware > was supported very well. They did what you expected a laptop to do in > that all of the peripherals worked with Linux drivers. Networking > worked with native drivers. Graphics display worked with native > drivers. Suspend to ram works. Suspend to disk works. The volume > buttons work. The keyboard light can be toggled on and off. The > special function keys work. Battery life is reasonable. The keyboard > is the best of any of the laptops I have used. In my experience > everything "just works".
On a related topic, could you please tell me which of the current ThinkPads have the same basic (awesome) feature-set which the old favourites (T61, T42 etc.) had? I am genuinely unaware, and wanted to know if all the ones available today (X-series, T-series, Edge etc.) carried similar goodness. Thanks! Kumar -- Microsoft is not the answer. Microsoft is the question. NO (or Linux) is the answer. (Taken from a .signature from someone from the UK, source unknown) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20110209032135.ga18...@bluemoon.alumni.iitm.ac.in