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Bob BLU wrote: > At 01:09 PM 11/2/2005, Jerry Feldman wrote: > > >>AAMD 64-bit chips are faster ... >> >>HP laptop model numbers that are certified for Linux. > > > What exists at the intersection of these two statements? HP Compaq does make some Turion 64 notebooks. I have one of the Presario V2000z series machines. It works well running Linux for the most part, including power management right out of the box. The ATI integrated graphics require a proprietary ATI driver (free from ati.com, but not open source) for full support. I have not been able to get the Broadcom wireless LAN interface to work. (I have the one without Bluetooth support. The one with Bluetooth is a different chipset, which may work better or worse with Linux.) There's no native driver, but it's supposed to be possible to get it to work with the Windows driver and NDISWrapper; I just haven't taken the time to fuss with it yet. AMD-based notebooks run 64-bit code infinitely faster than any currently available Intel-based notebook system, other than desktop-replacement systems using Pentium 4 chips. Intel has no 64-bit support in Pentium-M, and no immediate plans to add it. Performance of Turion 64 running 32-bit code is about equal to Pentium-M systems of the same clock speed. I certainly haven't been disappointed by the processor performance of my system. 3D graphics are far from state of the art, but this is a bargain notebook with integrated graphics, not one with a high-end graphics accelerator. The down side of Turion 64 is that it can't match the battery life of Centrino. It's not terrible; my system gets about 2.5 hours with the standard battery, or 5 hours with the big one. But it's not perfect; a similar Centrino system from Compaq (same case, display, and batteries) runs about 20% longer. I have no idea whether my system is actually certified for Linux. It certainly doesn't say anything about it on the case, and it's primarily sold as a consumer product, not a business product, so probably not. But it does work, aside from the wireless. I have SUSE 10 installed natively (dual-boot). I also have Ubuntu installed to run under VMware hosted by Windows XP, which is what I use when I want to use wireless networking.
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