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On Sun, Mar 18, 2007 at 10:59:28PM -1000, david wrote:
Toshiba, IBM Thinkpad, Sony have all been fine in my
experience. My
Linux laptop experience is limited to Toshiba, where everything just
worked on two different models.
I understand that Sony hardware is not Linux friendly.
I found the old Sony VAIO's to be the most ergonomically-correct (for me) laptops
around. No other keyboard has come close.
I had a PCG-F190 and then a PCG-F290 and I loved them dearly. But I only used them at home
and never took them out of the house, because they were 1) horribly fragile, and 2) so
underpowered that I basically just used them as VNC clients to a "real" computer
(a 1.2Ghz Athlon with 1GB RAM) that was actually capable of running desktop applications.
The NeoMagic video was pretty well-supported in X, and the NeoMagic audio was useless
(never worked properly with either ALSA or OSS) but I stuffed a USB audio dongle in the
thing and got sound out of it just fine.
I dunno about the newer VAIO's being any less Linux-friendly than any other laptop
with proprietary WIFI and proprietary LoseModem and proprietary video drivers.
- -ken
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