Dell Continues Shipping Fresh Linux Laptops
jones_supa writes: In its latest move, Dell will be bringing Ubuntu 14.04 LTS to its top-of-the-line Precision M3800 workstation laptop and the latest model of the Dell XPS 13. Both systems will be running Ubuntu 14.04.1. According to Barton George, Dell's Director of Developer Programs, programmers had been asking for a better, officially-supported Ubuntu developer laptop. This came about from a combination of the efforts of Dell software engineer Jared Dominguez and enthusiastic feedback. Specs of M3800: 15.6" LCD @ 3840x2160, Intel i7 quad core CPU, NVIDIA Quadro GPU, up to 16 GB RAM. The bad news is, as Dominguez explained on his blog, this version of the M3800 doesn't support its built-in Thunderbolt 2 port out of the box. However, thanks to the hardware-enablement stack in Ubuntu, starting with upcoming Ubuntu 14.04.2, you will be able to upgrade your kernel to add some Thunderbolt support.
W00t
I have a 2014 model of the XPS 13 and it runs Fedora seamlessly, including hibernation, camera, and touch screen. Yet it was still cheaper to buy an windows 8 version of the XPS 13 from microcenter and wipe it, rather than the preloaded developer edition from Dell.
...wouldn't bother me that a kernel doesn't support it.
So that's not a dealbreaker for me.
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
Why don't Ubuntu follow the stable kernel series from kernel.org? I believe this is what the Fedora distribution does and as far as I know it works fine. Linux has a very stable ABI and if things break they are usually quicker to fix it than Ubuntu is to backport the fix.
It solves no problem, other than declining cable sales at Best Buy. This guys sounds like a whiner.
Dell's linux systems lack proper support as do many of the systems sold. It's quite frustrating. I wish they'd quit shipping with hardware components dependent on proprietary software. If I wanted a proprietary operating system I'd of gone with Microsoft Windows or Apple's OS X. I don't!
Give me freedom- or stop marketing the same old crap.
Again change for the sake of change.
Changes are too scary and bad and it is a lousy ploy by Microsoft to force us to upgrade to features we do not need.... oh wait this is Linux?
Hail Ubuntu
I've never been able to find high enough resolution models with System76 or Penguin computing. The XPS-13 is great. Just works even when upgraded to the latest Ubuntu. Jared keep it up and I will keep buying more of these - three additional purchases to Dell from me alone so far that you would never have had without the Sputnik project.
Coming Soon... They have only had how many years to figure this out?
the most cheaply made crap that they can with ubuntu on it.
There, fixed the headline for ya!
It's nice to see that Dell have put Linux as an OS option right next to WIndows (and $101 cheaper than Windows too). A bit strange for them to ship a Linux release that initially has no Thunderbolt support, though I suspect not many people use Thunderbolt-only hardware outside of the Apple ecosystem.
Defaults to an HDD in the config options which is also weird, especially since it appears to have 2 drive bays, so surely you'd want an SSD in there in one of the bays?
The higher res screen is only a $70 bump, so it would appear to be a no-brainer to pick that option. If the final price wasn't so eye-wateringly high (and me being in the UK probably means it'll either not appear on the UK dell site or be a dollar to pound conversion), it would be an attractive high-end Linux laptop.
if I upgrade to Slackware?
The drive configuration depends on the type of workload you have. Two SSDs in RAID 0 would be very nice to have in a laptop.
Why is it always Ubuntu? Why not Fedora? I have looked at Linux boxes over the years, both desktop and laptop, and the distro always seems to be Ubuntu. I'd rather use a Mac.
I suspect a new custom restriction to send Linux computer on the goodguy side of the border that only apply to Dell computer. In the mean time I spend nice time on a 2013 ASUS G75VX (i7 16gb BR-Burner) with Linux Mint and a functionnal Thunderbolt port
Ceci n'est pas une Signature !
Why would you want Thunderbolt again? It is a badly broken (IE doesn't actually do what is promised like channel bonding and a few other things that are sort of fixed in VERY recent silicon), costs far too much, forces the use of painfully expensive active cables, and only passes PCIe or video. This last bit is problematic because if you want any functionality on the other end of the cable, you need to add full controllers there too, think expensive and wasteful of power. In essence you are hot-plugging controllers with the cable, and while it works in theory....
TB is a badly broken spec from day one, it was meant as a control point for Intel to force the use of it's silicon in phones.mobile by replacing USB with something only it could provide. Needless to say the market saw through this and didn't adopt it in droves, sans the few that drank from the Intel money hose. The second the hose was shut off, so was the design wins.
The main reason that USB3 had such a slow start was because Intel was desperate to kill it to promote TB. Since Intel had control over the USB3 cert process, things went might slow for technical minutia that would easily pass by previous spec certs. Coincidence? Nope.
TB is a bad idea on technical, cost, lock-in, and many many other reasons, not working correctly ever being a key one there. Delivered silicon is a joke, there is and always will be one supplier, and progress is glacial. USB3.1 on the other hand beats it like a drum in every regard other than single channel throughput.
Why do I want to pay for this in my next laptop again?
-Charlie
Linux cannot into touchscreens, which is amusing considering Android handles it easily.
So this is the year of Linux laptop!
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Is there any price difference compared to the same hw with Windows?
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
...but I'd still go with System76.
Waka Waka!
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might be boon for Linux. Then again I sucked it down for product activation. Linux still isn't much use for gaming. And it's still a nightmare to write and deploy closed source software on Linux...
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in tyime. For all FreeBSD is already with the number But now they're effort to address Serves to reinforce
and me being in the UK probably means it'll either not appear on the UK dell site or be a dollar to pound conversion
Currently 1 GBP is worth about 1.50 USD. Sales tax is much higher in the UK and other EU countries than in the US, and included in the sticker price in the UK and other EU countries unlike in the US. This accounts for about 0.30 USD of the difference. The other 0.20 USD, if any, is probably shipping from North America and the increased warranty requirements of the EU.
Dell would be stupid to put Ubuntu on touchscreens. For those, they should use Android itself.
Window management in Android OS is designed to display a single application maximized. This works for 4 to 8 inch screens of phones and tablets, not so much for 13 inch or larger screens of laptops, where people expect to view applications side by side. Change this behavior and your customers will lose access to Google Play Store.
I just bought a XPS 15 with windows 2 weeks ago for Ubuntu because the XPS 13 was too underpowered for my needs. Why can't they offer Linux on the Quad-core/SSD/16GB systems?
"hardware-enablement stack in Ubuntu, starting with upcoming Ubuntu 14.04.2, you will be able to upgrade your kernel"
Well, thank the gods, where would we be without hardware enablement, oh man.
I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
Thunderbolt is basically an incompatible security risk
aaaaaaa
$1650!!! Are they crazy?
$300 is more than enough though I'd pay $400 for that display on my chromebook (chromos wiped).
It's been interesting over the years to watch Dell battle with Microsoft to get out laptops with Linux, take them away, put them back, over and over again. When Microsoft releases new versions of Windows, the Linux offerings mysteriously disappear from Dell's site. In either case, getting a machine from Dell is easy to wipe Windows off of it, and put Linux on, so no concerns with that anyway. I recently wiped Windows 8 off of a Dell Inspiron 660, disabled UEFI Secure Boot, and put CentOS 6.6 on it with ease. Quick, easy, no hassles and up and running with great success.