Hi

I run proxmox and Ubuntu machines on my server , but have always used a windows laptop(which is work based).

The work laptop now is very restricted so I was thinking of getting a laptop with Linux.

There are a few ThinkPad X1 carbon gen 7 i7 on sale in Europe.

I was wondering would they work well for Linux.

I just be using it as a daily driver , battery life is prob main concern.

Thank

19 points

Checkout framework.laptop

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17 points
8 points

+1 to framework. I have one and love it, works amazing with linux (is especially well supported by fedora, but any distro works) and you get really good repairability, upgradability, and customizability hardware wise.

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1 point
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14 points
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+1 for the Framework laptop from https://frame.work/ . It’s my favorite laptop I’ve ever owned and the Linux support is excellent. There’s a healthy Linux community surrounding this laptop and the Arch wiki even has an entire aricle dedicated to it.

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5 points

I just got one for my wife.

Their stock was low so I got the German model+a US keyboard and did the swap.

There were a lot of screws, took about 45 minutes, just put some music on and went to town. Their documentation is top notch.

Really pretty awesome.

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3 points

Too expensive though.

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2 points
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My experience is the complete opposite.

I pre-ordered a 13 inch DIY Ryzen 7840u with 32 gigs and it cost me 1600€. I will spend another 50 on an SSD. Not sure you can get that kind of hardware for less, elsewhere.

A similarly specced XPS for example is easily a couple hundred more.

Edit: just checked again, at least Dell Italy only sells the 13 XPS with a 13th (or 12th) gen Intel. Fine, I don’t really mind it. But it sells for 2100€ (with 32GB, a 1TB drive and an OLED display). I guess that the OLED alone might be worth the price difference.

The point tho is that even at the same price, I’d still take framework’s repairability any day.

Funny thing is, I’m gonna replace my current XPS 13 with an 11th gen Intel just because the RAM is not upgradable and I’m stuck with 16gigs.

I’m sick and tired of having to get rid of perfectly fine hardware just because it’s not upgradable.

With framework I can spend another 100-150 down the road and bump my config’s 32 to 64.

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1 point

@happyhippo
you have a little monster laptop
@bankimu @linux

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1 point

@happyhippo @bankimu but if your not looking to spend 2000+ on a laptop then they don’t offer anything. and the price for their min spec is insane a ryzen 5 8gb or ram and 250gb of storage. no ports, pretty standard display for $1,300 is insane

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10 points

Framework :)

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8 points

Thinkpads generally work quite well with Linux from what Ive heard.

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7 points

Thinkpad is a excellent choice for Linux as Lenovo supports Linux on some machines. I am rocking an old intel 4th gen Notebook as sidekick to my main machine. Works like a charm and was cheap.

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