Sujet : Re: Subnotebook?
De : Danny (at) *nospam* hyperspace.vogon.gov (R Daneel Olivaw)
Groupes : comp.os.linux.hardwareDate : 10. Feb 2025, 09:54:22
Autres entêtes
Organisation : To protect and to server
Message-ID : <voceru$33tu9$1@paganini.bofh.team>
References : 1 2
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David Brown wrote:
On 07/02/2025 20:43, Carl Fink wrote:
Anyone have a recommendation for a Linux-installed, or second-best
Linux-compatible subnotebook? I'm defining a subnote as having a 10" or
smaller screen, and I'm looking to buy new, not refurb or used.
>
I've never found much point in pre-installed Linux systems - they never have the distro or setup I want. But that might be just me. So I tend to get the hardware I want, then install the Linux I want, ignoring the "pre-installed" Windows.
Generally, most hardware works out of the box with a fairly modern distro (vastly more than with Windows), but there are some things to watch out for if you get a very new design. The most common issue, I think, is new laptops or notebooks with Wifi chips that are not supported by the kernel versions that come as standard with a mainstream distro like Mint or Ubuntu. That means upgrading the kernel, which can be a pain without a working network - and these machines often don't have Ethernet. So make sure you have a USB C docking station or Ethernet adaptor handy for putting it all together.
Occasionally you can get something with a version of DOS as an operating system, but you still have the problem of maybe-incompatible-hardware.