I'm a developer who's getting a bit sick of the high price of apple laptops. Their hardware used to be more reliable and I could justify the price for a great trackpad (the best I've ever used honestly), good battery life and OSX. I realize though I spend most of my time in chrome and the terminal and in theory I could be spending a lot less for something almost as good. (Maybe something with a better keyboard?)<p>It's been years since I've looked at the PC ecosystem and I frankly it scares me. I have no idea what's a marker of quality and what I can trust.<p>What are good linux laptops for 2018?
I have a Dell XPS 15 and to be frank I would advise against it.<p>Good points:<p>- Strong hardware<p>- Looks nice<p>Bad points:<p>- M2 SSD requires changing some BIOS preferences to work on Linux<p>- Nvidia graphics card is a pain on Ubuntu. Do a Google search for nouveau.modeset<p>- The fans are on most of the time, even during idle. The machine isn't hot either - it just likes to run the fans<p>- The 1920x1080 screen isn't that great and a "4K" option is quite expensive<p>- The carbon-fibre looking plastic looks cheap and is a magnet for finger prints. It does not look good and is difficult to clean<p>- It's not a great machine to move about with. Mine weighs almost 2KG<p>- No Ethernet port unlike a T470. You need a USB adapter
Here's my experience. If you develop everything locally, get a decent laptop with Ubuntu or Windows 10 Pro.<p>Windows 10 Pro Edition comes with WSL, a Linux subsystem which is pretty decent for my deep learning implementation and small scale test. With Xming, I can do some visualization as well. There will be downsides.
If you get a laptop that just comes with Ubuntu or any Linux distro, you are good to go.<p>If your development is cloud based, Google is push Chrome OS into a Linux friendly direction. Chromebooks are pretty good choices, price-wise, functionality-wise and portability-wise, you name it. At the time of writing (July 20s, 2018), Pixelbook and a few more Chromebooks receive the support of Linux container. More will be supported.
I'm typing this on my Lenovo T480 running Ubuntu. Here is a little review I wrote after a couple of days with the machine:<p><a href="https://reprep.io/writings/20180621_lenovo_t480_linux_review.html" rel="nofollow">https://reprep.io/writings/20180621_lenovo_t480_linux_review...</a><p>I ended up installing NVidia's proprietary driver which let me disable the MX150 and use the Intel video card instead. Machine seems to run a little cooler since.<p>I was pleasantly surprised that Ubuntu auto detected my network printer. It also played nice the first time I plugged into the RJ45 port.<p>I'm still underwhelmed by the audio quality of the built-in speakers. It's sufficient for video conferencing, but it's a little sad when playing music.<p>Another minor annoyance is that when restoring from suspend, the laptop briefly flashes the previous desktop before showing the lock screen.
I bought the new Dell XPS15 with 32GB RAM, 1TB SSD, and Nvidia GPU the week it was released, and straightaway installed Ubuntu 18.04. It is powerful enough to last me three years and the price was good.<p>I am mostly happy with it - superfast, great screen. The two problems I had were when installing the Nvidia drivers, plus the fans stay on more than I think they should.<p>Rather than waste hours trying to solve these, I have decided to wait patiently and see what the community and Nvidia come up with.<p>Would I recommend others to buy one? Yes, though perhaps wait a while if any of your key requirements are not yet fully supported.
Pretty happy with my System76 Galago Pro with high-dpi display. It's small and light and has a really crisp screen.<p>That's my home machine. At work I have a 2015 MacBookPro. Comparing the two the only downside of the System76 is a trackpad about 70% as good and heat management design isn't so great so the fan spins up more and louder. (and the fat bezel around the screen, but whatever, the pixels that are there are good)
I put linux on my x1 carbon (gen 5) and it works well enough. Some notes, in no particular order:<p>* great keyboard<p>* kind of shit trackpad<p>* trackpoint is pretty nice at least<p>* hidpi is a pain in the ass to set up<p>..* looks great once you get it working<p>..* some apps like Zoom refuse to scale up, so the buttons are tiny<p>* light weight<p>* really long battery
Buy a T-series Thinkpad. They're sturdy, have really good Linux support, and even the older ones are extremely robust. Look for an older one, such as a T420; or, if you want a newer one, the T480. Those are going to have easily-replaceable memory, battery, and storage.
I have a x62 and it's an all around great Linux laptop for development (but I only code for fun, YMMV but I read good reviews using it in professional environment). I built it myself and it honestly was one of the funnest hands-on project I had in a while. Reminded the fun I had when I first learned how to built my own desktop.
System76. I have a 2017 Oryx pro. Its fantastic. Not perfect, nothing is but as a developer it’s the best laptop I’ve owned. The specs trounce anything Apple.<p>System76 is also one of the only companies that sells machines that is committed to Open source, linux and hardware. They recently released their own Linux distro Pop_OS!. Its a really well put together Ubuntu based distro. Great design and continuity.<p>They recently opened a factory and are designing and building their machines in house.
You get lifetime support.<p>I don’t work for them but I really can’t say enough nice things about them.<p>They are worth a look.<p>1.
I use a Thinkpad X1 Carbon as my daily driver with Ubuntu and it works well. My main advice is whatever laptop you choose, make sure there is good driver support (unless you really like tinkering).
Hands down: T,W,X,L-ThinkPad-Series from Lenovo are IMO still the sweet spot.<p>The keyboard is the best, the trackpad is ok but far away from macs, the battery life is meh but good enough with an extended battery.<p>But what I value most is: it's a sturdy thing.
You will not break it as easily as other laptops.
It will not get hot and burn your legs. Most models can be opened, cleaned and upgraded.
Depends on the Model, but you can get ALL the ports you need!
And, AND the freaking docking station. I have one at home and one at work and I just put the Laptop in the Docking station and I get all the ergonomics of a desktop Computer (because of external screen and so on).
It's true, they are not what IBM used to build. But as I said IMO still the best for people who want to get stuff done and value hipness very little.<p>XPS are cool and all but for me it's more for people who value the hip parts of a mac, like shiny and cool, but fundamentally they only got the better looks.
I've been using an Dell XPS-13 with the Dell-provided Ubuntu for about three months and it's pretty nice. The trackpad is the best I've used on a Linux machine (still not as good as the Apple trackpads, but lots better than others I've used). Everything (sound, wireless, etc.) works across a system sleep. I still find the UI janky compared to MacOS or Windows, but it is bearable.<p>A year ago I tried setting up a vanilla XPS-15, wiping the Windows install and doing my own Ubuntu setup, and gave up hope after a couple of weeks that I'd be able to make the trackpad not suck, or for sleep to not screw the system to the point that it was easier just to shut the machine down every time instead of sleeping. That machine was also fairly heavy (normally I don't care much about that, but it was definitely noticeable).
I wrote a blog post about my (good) experiences with the Lenovo x220 and the more modern Lenovo X1C 4th Gen / 2016 edition here:<p><a href="http://www.pixelmonkey.org/2017/09/01/lenovo-linux" rel="nofollow">http://www.pixelmonkey.org/2017/09/01/lenovo-linux</a><p>Hope it helps.
Apart the Thinkpad and the XPS lines already mentioned there (almost exclusively), don't put aside the laptop line of Xiaomi (specifically the Air and Pro models).<p>They are suprisingly well supported on linux, in addition to being very good all-around ultraportable at a small price.
I bought a refurbished Thinkpad X230 earlier this year and I'm very happy with it.<p>What tipped me over the edge is the repairability and modifiability of the laptops. After an ASUS laptop broke and I was only able to fix it because some random eBayer was selling a working keyboard, I swore off non-business laptops. There's a whole community of people who do nothing but mod Thinkpads, and companies that just refurbish ones (which have often been sitting in some office somewhere and are in great condition). Linux runs fantastically on it as well.<p>As for the trackpad...well, it's not great, but I use the trackpoint which I've always preferred. The keyboard on the other hand is amazing.
I recently set up a personal use Linux laptop. I picked the Lenovo Ideapad 720s. There was a good price and I really like lightweight and thin laptops. I set up Antergos on it and am a very happy user now. I run VS Code to work on side projects and work in both nodejs and php/apache and everything works flawlessly.<p>The setup itself involved a lot of gotchas, I wrote a post about it: <a href="https://medium.com/@bigilui/installing-antergos-linux-on-a-lenovo-ideapad-720s-amd-ryzen-dual-booting-with-windows-10-1ac8e2bd94a6" rel="nofollow">https://medium.com/@bigilui/installing-antergos-linux-on-a-l...</a> Hope it helps if you decide to do it.
*30 series Thinkpads (ivybridge) have the broadest support across all OSes (windows, Linux, BSDs, even some hackintoshes). If you don't want a new laptop, you can get one of those for cheap. General advice: Don't get anything with nvidia.
I'm quite happy running ubuntu on hp spectre x360 15 2017. Good build quality. I was surprised that the rotating touch screen and the tent/notepad modes work so well with ubuntu. Had to fiddle with bios during install to handle the SSD, ended up removing windows. The MX150 graphics card is not in use, but I guess if I were gaming I would find a way to use it. It's not a cheap option, but was way cheaper (roughly half the price) than the equivalent MBP.
T480s. No weird issues with the laptop itself. The Thunderbolt dock can be finnicky. It loses USB of the dock sometimes; that's about it. Kernel patches are underway I believe.
Thing is an absolute joy under linux. Don't get me wrong, it excels in nothing. But it's 4 out of 5 for everything.<p>- Battery is fine<p>- Weight is fine<p>- Dimensions are fine<p>- You can add a ram stick for 24GB total (8GB is soldered on).<p>- Thunderbolt<p>- Fan management is fine.<p>- Thermals are almost fine.<p>- Exception: The speakers are embarrassingly bad.<p>For context, I came from a Macbook Air 13.
Another few weeks old Lenovo T480 user here.<p>What I like: 32GB RAM option. No dedicated GPU. Good trackpoint and great keyboard. Arch runs like a charm.<p>Note regarding the batteries:
Internal and external battery, both easy to exchange. It however drains the most healthy battery first (down to 5%) before it starts draining the second one. I'd rather have it always drain the external battery first since that one is easier to replace.
Ever since I have worked with RedHat, I really like the standard-issue lenovo ThinkPad. I am writing this from Fedora linux on T470s.<p>But the best idea probably is to just get what your friends/coworkers are using :)
I currently have Fedora 28 installed on a T470 and a T480s and it’s pretty flawless. Not the sexiest laptops out there, but they seem pretty good for Linux.