I have been building up Linux Workstations for a couple of decades, my first 
goto is RB Computing at ShopRBC.com and secondarily CanadaComputer, both local 
Ottawa stores.  Always had good results from ShopRBC.When I worked at Xandros 
Corp we sourced all of our hardware for our Linux needs from ShopRBC.I continue 
to find better results with AMD graphics cards over more problematic and less 
Linux friendly NVidia.
YMMV of course.
Cheers.Nathan




Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.
-------- Original message --------From: Charles Nadeau 
<[email protected]> Date: 2018-12-04  2:16 AM  (GMT-05:00) To: 
[email protected] Cc: [email protected], [email protected] Subject: 
Re: [linux] Hardware sources? 
I had good experiences at CanadaComputers too. I bought 2 servers there en 2010 
and 2011 and they are still working 24/7 since I purchased them.
Charles
On Mon, Dec 3, 2018 at 6:49 PM J C Nash <[email protected]> wrote:
Yes, the number of stores is getting fewer, and the remaining vendors are ones

I don't consider useful ("Worst" Buy -- who I discovered do not honour 
warranties,

Walmart, etc.) However, I have dealt with CanadaComputers and have bought 3 
laptops

(all Asus, which have been Debian/Ubuntu/Mint friendly) as well as a tower. The 
tower,

however, was 2012 and still going strong. They also set it up "no-OS" so I could

avoid the WinTax. Unfortunately, Asus appears to ignore Linux these days.



Perhaps other members will contribute some places and some ideas about hardware 
to

avoid.



JN



On 2018-12-03 11:58 a.m., Barry McLarnon wrote:

> My Linux desktop system is getting rather long in the tooth and has some 
> stability issues, so I'm looking to replace

> it.  It seems that the number of local sources for barebones PCs has dwindled 
> almost to nothing since the last time I

> bought any hardware, and I'm looking for recommendations.

> 

> Also, is there any particular hardware, especially graphics, that I should 
> avoid due to iffy Linux support?  I've used

> openSUSE for many years and will probably give their Tumbleweed rolling 
> release a whirl, but apparently it can be a real

> hassle if you don't have well-supported hardware.  I don't need state of the 
> art, just a stable platform for general

> desktop use and some light-duty server stuff (web, mail, and some in-house 
> streaming).

> 

> Thanks in advance for any suggestions you may have on what to get and where 
> to get it...

> 

> Barry

> 



To unsubscribe send a blank message to [email protected]

To get help send a blank message to [email protected]

To visit the archives: https://lists.linux-ottawa.org





-- 
Charles Nadeau Ph.D.
http://charlesnadeau.blogspot.com/

Reply via email to