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On Fri, 08 Apr 2011 07:48:30 -0400, Jerry Feldman wrote: > On 04/08/2011 12:19 AM, David Kramer wrote: >> Adding my experience, a lot has to do with which Dell line you get. >> Like many companies, there's a big difference between their >> light-and-cheap line, their multimedia-gaming line, and their business >> line. I always buy from the business line, and have been very happy >> with the construction (and full linux compatibility). For instance, the >> business line has a metal chassis instead of a plastic one, and are more >> powerful. I have a Latitude D820 and my wife has a D830. > I agree, except my experience is more with HP. My HP laptop has got to > be 7 years old, and I only use it at the installfests to burn DVDs, but > I used to bring it to work and BLU meetings. It is an early 64-bit AMD > Turion processor. It was also certified for LInux by HP. At the > installfests it seems we always had some issues with Dells, but the > lower end laptops are very cost reduced for any brand. I'm not sure if > this is still true, but you could get 2 identical Dell desktops, and > look inside and they might have different chips and boards. Again, I'm > not sure if this is still true. WRT Installfests, I still tend to favor > Lenovo Thinkpads. But my Acer Aspire One netbook booted up with Ubuntu > nearly perfectly the first time. After the initial installation, I had > to install b43-fwcutter, but in Ubuntu, the installation of b43-fwcutter > also gives you an option to download and install the firmware where > other distributions do not. (Mint Linux, for instance I had to install > b43-fwcutter from the Ubuntu repositories). In other distros you > download the appropriate Windows Broadcom driver and use fwcutter to > isolate and install the firmware. I've always had excellent luck with Dells. I've had an Inspiron 8000, 8200 (actually, a couple of them -- I always buy used and the first one had some problems I could never fix), and my current 9400/E1705, and I've never had problems running Linux on them. The only things I don't like about the 9400 is that it has a limit of 3.3 GB of RAM and will not enable AHCI on its SATA controller. Otherwise, it's great. Finding a WUXGA screen (as opposed to 1920x1080) is getting a bit difficult these days. -- Robert Krawitz <rlk-FrUbXkNCsVf2fBVCVOL8/A at public.gmane.org> Tall Clubs International -- http://www.tall.org/ or 1-888-IM-TALL-2 Member of the League for Programming Freedom -- http://ProgFree.org Project lead for Gutenprint -- http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net "Linux doesn't dictate how I work, I dictate how Linux works." --Eric Crampton
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