Dear all,
I'd like to start by warning against purchasing any product from Purism.
They have consistently misled and profited off the backs of the free
software movement, without giving much back at all. Their marketing
material made many high claims - that they would be able to run
Coreboot, they were working towards getting Libreboot on the device.
This was false. They made claims that they were working towards
convincing Intel to free its infamous management engine (something even
Google were unable to do for its Chromebooks). Finally, when Coreboot
was actually ported (by a Google employee on their lunch breaks,
apparently), it ran with blobs that performed all the initialization
code. I think it is not unreasonable to describe what they did as a
scam. At any rate it is an overpriced generic laptop.
I do recommend getting a device running Coreboot, though. It is an
important free software project, and you won't have trouble with
manufacturers restricting you, e.g. the secure boot issues mentioned, or
whitelists of wireless hardware. The X230 runs Coreboot, and there are
interesting things that one can do with it.
However, if you are not going to use this, then a better route might be
to get a device that ships without Windows or with something like Ubuntu
out of the box. An example of this is the Dell XPS laptops, which are
reasonably well made, although not as configurable. However, they are
expensive. Other people I know have had reasonable results with the
newest Thinkpads, although, one should note, they use whitelists for
network hardware (Dell may too, but I am not sure), and they are slowly
becoming less configurable, e.g. they no longer have dial-up, it's
harder to replace the memory, and they no longer have features such as
dial-up (tongue in cheek, but it's an example). They still perform well
and are somewhat configurable, though. Other things to watch out for are
the use of discrete graphics - often newer NVidia cards are used, which
may or may not work well with Nouveau, and are reasonably power-hungry.
Regards,
Duncan
On 30.04.2017 17:00, Steven R. Baker wrote:
I've spent a lot of time thinking about this lately. My next machine
will be a Purism Librem, I think. But I've been a life-long fan of
ThinkPads. I currently have a W550s, an X250, and an X1 Carbon. Cannot
recommend enough.
The main reasons for replacing the X220 tablet:
1. weight - I'd like to get something under 1.5kg, the lower the
better
and there are plenty of models between 1.0 and 1.2kg these days.
2. screen resolution - the 768 pixel screen height is troublesome for
some applications
X270 will solve this nicely. So will the X1 Carbon. I have two machines
with "HiDPI" (the W and the X1 Carbon) and it's very well supported by
both GNOME and KDE.
3. battery - it is not like new any more
The X270 has a replaceable second battery, so you can carry around as
many as you need.
Looking around, though, if I choose a current model laptop (Lenovo or
otherwise) it appears there is something of a minefield:
- am I going to run into Secure Boot issues? I've met other people at
events recently who had new laptops and were struggling to get into
the
BIOS and disable Secure Boot.
I haven't had any issues with this.
- Windows included - can anybody give any tips on how to buy without
paying the Windows tax?
- dongles - many of them favor dongles/expansion ports these days,
some
of these dongles only work with the PSU, will the total weight with
PSU
and dongle really be less than my current laptop?
The X1 Carbon comes with an ethernet dongle, and that's annoying.
Are there any specific models that anybody would recommend in the
ultraportable form-factor (e.g. under i7, 16GB or more, 1.5kg, 12.5" -
14", suitable for use on small spaces such as on trains and
airplanes)?
If I wasn't nearly certain my next machine would be a Librem, I'd be
getting an X270.
Has anybody tried the 2017 models of the X1 Carbon or X270 with any
Linux distribution?
I have more than one colleague with X1 Carbon from 2017 (on is an X1
Yoga), and one with an X270. Both claim that support is great. I don't
know which distributions they run, but I suspect Ubuntu.
Good luck!
-Steven
Regards,
Daniel
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