

E and L series ThinkPads tend to have upgradable ram. The build isn’t as good but the upgradability is something to keep in mind.
As for the specs and the lack of mentioning them, I agree.
E and L series ThinkPads tend to have upgradable ram. The build isn’t as good but the upgradability is something to keep in mind.
As for the specs and the lack of mentioning them, I agree.
Why would I talk about US prices/currency for a danish tech site?
If someone is looking for tech in Europe, it doesn’t make sense for me to use a US reference.
But wouldn’t mint have the same issues as Debian 12?
I checked LinuxPusher and I wouldn’t say they’re affordable. Their laptops are 2-3x the price of the same laptop running no OS on sites like eBay.de. For example, their cheapest T470 is 3000 krone, while the equivalent laptop on ebay is like 150 euro or 1120 krone.
I looked at a Thinkpad L14 G1, an elitebook 840 G5, and the dell 3060 Micro and it’s the same. Consistently 2x and higher markup.
Is that markup worth a 2 year warranty?
You could literally buy a second device if the first one kicks the bucket and still be out ahead monetarily.
If you want to slowly start using linux and already have a pc, make a portable install on any flash drive (I like external ssds for this exact reason) you want, and boot it. (ideally set the RealTimeIsUniversal registry entry in windows so Linux and windows don’t fuck up the bios time).
But would it fix the core issues that OP is having?
You’re not wrong, but then there’s games like this that need at least 6 gb (more on dx12) to run on low without it running out of memory and either crashing or not launching. This is an actual issue with this particular game.
Edit: Cyberpunk has gotten a lot better though and will run on things it has no business running on.
I’m pretty sure they have Linux support. It’s just supported in Mesa. No external drivers.
I have a game that eats 11 gb of vram on low at 1080p (I play it on windowed). It suffers from some Unreal engine shenanigans and it’s also a few years old.
Mine had issues with integrated graphics where the driver would crash constantly.
I’m assuming stock ax210 wifi card as well.
I had a lot of stability issues on 11th gen Intel but I was using windows. (I have switched to an amd motherboard on my laptop (no it’s not a framework))
I’d love to know what hardware you are using as well.
Right but the impact is not as detrimental compared to a pcie gen 4x4 card on a gen 3 motherboard.
Like it’s not great but it could be worse. Tbh if I was on a gen 3 system, I’d appreciate a newer motherboard and CPU over a new gpu. Especially taking into consideration that an i9 9900kf gets beaten by a Ryzen 7 5825u on benchmarks.
I accidentally posted like 2 words.
That being said, the x8 cards were mostly okay on pcie gen 3 systems. Problem is the halved bandwidth.
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They no longer have a bios whitelist. But you can’t seem to install intel wifi cards on some of their amd laptops. They just straight up don’t show up in any os.
(Ac 7265 rev d and ax210)
Text on GIMP absolutely blows. I have way less issues working with DDS files on PS compared to GIMP. I also used to have issues with fuzzy select but that may have been a skill issue on my part.
(I haven’t gotten a chance to work with 3.0)
You have to be careful on the 80 series. They are either 7th gen Intel or 8th gen Intel. My sister has an i5-7200u t580. Also 8th gen is weird, I’ve been having issues with my pavilion trying to get it to run at base clock. I had to uninstall Intel thermald and run “throttled”, a GitHub script to run at base clock.
Also it’s the last generation of T series that has dual batteries, and a few gens later, they move to soldered ram.