Slashdot Mirror


Dell's New Sputnik 3 Mates Touchscreen With Ubuntu

ClaraBow writes "I find it interesting that Dell has started selling a thin and light touchscreen laptop called the XPS 13 Developer Edition, which will have Ubuntu Linux OS and Intel's fourth-generation Core processors, code-named Haswell. The laptop, code-named Sputnik, has a 13.3-inch touchscreen and will run on Ubuntu 12.04 OS. It is priced starting at $1,250 and is available in the U.S." One thing I wish was addressed in the blog post announcing this newest entry in the Sputnik line, or its listed specs (bad news beats not knowing, in this case), is battery life.

18 of 166 comments (clear)

  1. Relevant because Dell went private by assemblerex · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's interesting that a company that pretty much vowed to only be wintel is branching out.
    I am guessing microsoft upsetting people with surface has thawed large companies to alternatives.

  2. OR System76 by jmd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    https://www.system76.com/laptops/model/daru4

    a bit cheaper

    1. Re:OR System76 by boorack · · Score: 3, Informative

      Expandable at least. You can plug in two standard SO-DIMM chips, one m-SATA drive and one 2.5" 7mm drive. It also has 14.4" full-HD screen, big enough to use its full resolution (not retina-like ultra-high pixel density where image has to be enlarged 2x, so you get half the resolution). I'm curious about its reliability.

      I'm using Asus UX-32VD which has similiar characteristics (notably it has one standard SO-DIMM slot and one standard 7mm 2.5" drive, despite its slim ultrabook-like look). Sometimes I need a bit more power and bigger screen (being "in the field", not at my desk), so standard PC does not count. I would like to see expandable 15"-16" ultrabook with 2576x1600 resolution (three columns of code plus sidebar!) and quad core processor. Ideally with one or two mSATA slots and one 2.5" bay and at least two SO-DIMM slots. Pixel density would be the same as in UX-31, so with good quality IPS display one would use every last bit of it. Something like Asus UX-51 but with better resolution and expandable. This would be terribly setup for techies, programmers in particular. Unfortunately, I'm not aware of such product - unlike desktop PCs where one can built one's own system from scratch, everyone is on vendors mercy when it comes to notebooks or ultrabooks.

  3. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We love Linux, that's why.

  4. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by Kjella · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's from a major OEM, it runs Linux which hopefully means it has Linux-friendly hardware and good Linux drivers. That's enough to be newsworthy on slashdot, which still hopes Linux will overtake the market share of such gems as Windows Vista and Windows 8 ;)

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  5. Re:This is neat and all by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I just bought similar hardware from Sony in order to run Linux. I would have considered this one if it had been available three weeks ago.

    Some of us really don't want a Mac. Obviously we're a niche market, but presumably Dell thinks there might be enough of us to justify one or two models.

    --
    It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
  6. $110 Windows tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The cost of the machine is $110 less than an otherwise identical XPS 13 with Windows 8.

  7. Same price as for Windows by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's the same price as the Windows 8 version. (That's listed at $1299, but scroll down for the "$50 off coupon".) This is progress for Dell; most of their previous Linux offerings cost more than the comparable Windows machine.

  8. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by Teun · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I don't care what version of Ubuntu it has, it is Linux compatible hardware, that's what counts.

    Within no time I'll have a nice KDE desktop installed.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  9. Re:No. by Teun · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You are assuming the traveller buying an ultra portable has always perfect network access or is happy to share his data with the cloud.

    Sorry, that's not the world I'm travelling in.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  10. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by H0p313ss · · Score: 4, Informative

    sudo apt-get install kubuntu-desktop ?

    --
    XML is a known as a key material required to create SMD: Software of Mass Destruction
  11. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by Teun · · Score: 4, Informative
    This being a touch screen I might go for one of the more suited KDE offerings like plasma-active or even the netbook layout.

    But hey, I can install more than one and at the login prompt I select the specific desktop that suits me best :)

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  12. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Linux-compatible does not mean anything more than "it works".

    And, as far as I've been able to tell over the latest 10 years or so, Linux "works" on basically 99% of machines I've ever touched without having to do anything special (yes, I have jumped through hoops, but that's not the point - here someone else has jumped through those hoops for you).

    Whether it works TO ITS FULL CAPACITY is another question entirely. For example, chances are that it's graphics chipset is "supported" but very, very slim that it enjoys full acceleration unless we're talking about an Intel chipset or a binary driver somewhere. And we can already do *that* anywhere we like.

    The fuss about Linux drivers is no longer "does it work" (and hasn't been, for a long time) so much as "does it work as fully as possible?". And almost certainly, in a consumer laptop, the answer is no.

    All this says is that their laptop happens to work in Linux with a certain configuration. There's no guarantee that it won't include a binary driver and/or only a certain Linux image being "supported" (i.e. working at all). And that leaves you off no better than a Windows machine that only comes with a recovery disk.

    (For hoops that I've jumped through, try setting up your Linux partitions to mirror those of a Zip-disk on even boot/install USB disks, having to manually load soundfonts with a script to make soundcards work, or having to compile for some mini-ITX boards that can barely support the 486 instruction set to get an idea of the sorts of things that can crop up with old / embedded / poorly supported hardware).

  13. Re:Battery Life by SeanBlader · · Score: 4, Informative

    The prior XPS13 with Linux would get 6 hours easy, this one with a haswell chip should get 8 at a minimum.

  14. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by msobkow · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What the hell are you people running on your machines?

    I run 2-3 copies of Eclipse, DB/2 LUW, PostgreSQL, and MySQL with a JEE debug server on a 4GB box. I run Oracle, Sybase ASE, and SQL Server on a Windows 7 laptop with a JEE debug server and a couple of other things with 4GB RAM, usually including a couple of java programs that are sucking back 768MB each.

    Neither box comes anywhere near thrashing. In fact, they hardly use their swap at all.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  15. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And the answer "The drivers are as supplied on the recovery disk" is not familiar to you?

    They are a big OEM. They don't care about supporting these drivers in anything but an OS they have supplied. Like my last 15 years of putting Linux machines into schools, I would bet that any Linux driver is tied to only a particular kernel, and that without proper source, and that they never update it. They won't support other distros and unless you want to run Ubuntu 12.04 (specifically) for ever, you won't see much action above and beyond telling you to put the machine back into it's factory state (i.e with Ubuntu 12.04 and their driver how it's always been installed).

    But more likely, it will have some cheap base hardware that's already "supported" by chance and they do nothing special to sell it as a Linux machine. And you won't get anything beyond the standard binaries.

    I will happily still to my "chances" on some random hardware, like I've been doing for over a decade. The examples I cite are few and far between and usually because support for a certain type of machine / hardware was DROPPED from Linux distros rather than anything to do with it not actually being present at all.

    I think you've just fallen for the advertising - it says Linux so it must mean ALL Linux forever with open-source code, right? My hardware from pre-1999 that says the same will happily prove you wrong. Sure, if you're lucky it had a 2.0/2.2 driver for it at some point, but you don't stand a chance of getting it working nowadays - and some of those drivers refused to install on anything but the "supported" distro.

    The fact that this comes with Ubuntu tells you one of two things:

    - They support ONLY Ubuntu
    - or -
    - Ubuntu does well enough supporting this with no help required.

    P.S. I have sent computers back to companies that claimed Linux support, and I made a major UK distributor fight with their suppliers to get me a custom BIOS made for a laptop because they sold it to me as "supporting" Windows XP and then found out it wouldn't boot XP if you had encryption software (required by law in my field) because of a crappy BIOS bug. Literally, I had an AMI BIOS written, just for that laptop, just for me, because of how much money it was going to cost them if I had sent the laptops we'd bought on the basis of XP support back.

    Trust me, doing the same for Linux is a LOT harder, especially when they can demonstrate that on ***A*** Linux with ***A*** driver that it works.

  16. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by AdamWill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "For example, chances are that it's graphics chipset is "supported" but very, very slim that it enjoys full acceleration unless we're talking about an Intel chipset or a binary driver somewhere."

    It has an Intel chipset, which has full 2D and 3D acceleration.

    I have the second-gen XPS 13 developer edition. Every function on the system works. It does not include any binary drivers. Yes, only the supplied Ubuntu install is 'supported', but then, if you buy a Windows 7 laptop and then self-install Windows 8 on it (for instance), your manufacturer isn't going to support that either. I run Fedora 19 on my second-gen XPS 13 and all its functions work fully and correctly.

    "try setting up your Linux partitions to mirror those of a Zip-disk on even boot/install USB disks"

    What? That fragment does not even make syntactical sense, so far as I can work out.

    "having to manually load soundfonts with a script to make soundcards work"

    Along with the reference to 'Zip-disks' - 1996 called and it wants its problems back.

    "or having to compile for some mini-ITX boards that can barely support the 486 instruction set to get an idea of the sorts of things that can crop up with old / embedded / poorly supported hardware"

    So, buying CPUs that 'can barely support the 486 instruction set' is a bad idea in 2013, huh? Thanks for the tip, I never would've guessed.

  17. Re:Why do you find it interesting? by deviated_prevert · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And at $1,250, overpriced. And of course they can then point to poor sales as to why they only sell Windows laptops / tablets at a reasonable price.

    It comes with one year support with the option of extending the support. Perhaps this is why Dell is trying out the market with Linux. It is billed as a developer device so one would think that the specs are for those who run and compile software not exactly your average joe consumer. If you notice the price is slightly lower than a comparable Mac Book PRO. The only difference is the screen res as Mac Books have a Retina Display, whatever the hell that is LOL. So this is not designed to be sold in the box stores. If it takes off then perhaps a cheaper line of consumer Linux option laptops might show up. Somehow I don't think Dell is going to dabble in the Chromebook market the way Samsung does.

    There is another thought, perhaps Dell is doing this to piss off Microsoft again, every time they have offered a Linux or no os option in the past all of a sudden they get a quick visit from the men in black from Redmond and POOF the line gets axed. The other thought is the reason why they have chosen Ubuntu this time around is because a stock Ubuntu need to be tweeked to do certain file formats and in selling Ubuntu in a stock format the goons from the MPEGLA cannot come after them, even if Microshaft comes knocking about fat and ntfs patents perhaps they will just turn around and sick them on Shuttleworth this time around instead of just dumping the Linux line like they did with their RedHat option laptops and desktops in the past.

    Considering that Dell already got cash from Redmond, perhaps they are trying to squeeze a little more cheese out of MS. Either way I do not expect them to actually aggressively market an alternative OS, they like all the other manufactures just kowtow to the almighty Windows, always have and I doubt they actually have the balls as a corporation to break the free from the OS monopoly.

    --
    This message was not sent from an iPhone because Peter Sellers really was a deviated prevert without a dime for the call