Ken Restivo wrote:
On Mon, Feb 14, 2011 at 04:41:25PM -0600, Josh
Lawrence wrote:
> Hey all,
>
> After getting scorched by purchasing two laptops with almost zero
> Linux support (battery status? what battery?), I have decided to
> go
> looking for a laptop that is sold by a company that supports
> Linux. I'm looking for any pointers to companies that sell Laptops
> that run Linux here in the US. (I'm already familiar with
> System76.) Bonus points if you've done business with them and have
> praise or warnings to go along with the pointers. Feel free to
> shill for your own company if you want, just make sure if you
> recommend a laptop that Linux can read the damn battery status. :)
I bought an Asus laptop (Core 2 Duo, 2.33Ghz) 4 years ago and it is
still my main audio production station on Linux. There was some
weirdage with the ATA support; a SATA drive would have been a better
choice, but that wasn't their fault, it was mine in configuring the
machine.
I also have an Asus EEE in which everything "just works", better than
any hardware I've ever had... probably because Asus used to actually
ship the EEE with Linux.
A friend of mine's family has a number of Asus EEE
PCs, they all work
very nicely with Linux.
I have used ThinkPads before, and they do indeed
work well on Linux,
but I absolutely HATE HATE HATE that damned nurple. I will never buy
a Thinkpad again. Gimme a trackpad or trackball or a real mouse any
day, and please, no nurple.
Decades ago, at a previous employment, I borrowed a
Thinkpad laptop to
take notes at a meeting. It had the IBM Trackpoint in the keyboard. I
used the laptop for about 45 minutes, went back to my desktop machine
(also an IBM, but no Trackpoint in the keyboard) - and found my fingers
automatically reaching for the Trackpoint. They are incredibly
efficient. Sorry you didn't like it.
I guess some people actually do like it.
ThinkPad + focus_on_mouse + typing anything with a 'g' or 'h' in it ==
TROUBLE.