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MacBook Pro (2016) Disappointment Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux (betanews.com)

Linux distributions have emerged as one of the beneficiaries in the aftermath of the MacBook Pros launch. Many people aren't pleased with the offering and prices of Apple's three new laptops and some of them are resorting to Linux-powered laptops. From a report on BetaNews: Immediately after the Apple Keynote, famed Ubuntu laptop and desktop seller, System76, saw a huge jump in traffic from people looking to buy its machines. The traffic was so intense, that it needed to upgrade servers to keep up, it said. "We experienced much more traffic than we had prepared for, the website didn't go hard down but experienced slowness. We had to scale up to return to normal. It was a pretty big surge, I don't have the details in front of me at the moment but I've not really heard of anything like this before. People being so underwhelmed by a product that immediately following a new product release they actively seek out competitor's products," says Ryan Sipes, Community Manager, System76. I decided to compare specifications and pricing on my own, so I headed to both Apple.com and System76.com to compare. Apple's new 15-inch MacBook Pro starts at $2,400. This machine has a Quad-core Sklyake i7, maxes out at 16GB of RAM, has an NVMe 256GB SSD, and a Radeon Pro 450 with a paltry 2GB memory. Alternatively, I headed to System76 and configured its 15-inch Oryx Pro. I closely matched the MacBook Pro specs, with a Quad-core Sklyake i7 and NVMe 256GB SSD. Instead of 16GB of RAM as found on the Apple, I configured with 32GB (you can go up to 64GB if needed). By default, it comes with a 6GB Nvidia GTX 1060. The price? Less than $2,000! In other words, the System76 machine with much better specs is less expensive than Apple's.

535 comments

  1. Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by KBentley57 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The summary sounds like an obvious plug for system76. I'm not saying it's bad, because what the summary says, is in fact true. I've compared them myself. I even have a System76 desktop and am pleased with it. However, and advertisement disguised as an article is still and advertisement.

    1. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's the jobs bubble exploding. I can see lots of religious Apple fans saying bad things about Apple.for the first time. Heck even arstechnica posts who say the new Mac is crap don't get the autodownvote they used to enjoy every time you didn't praise Apple. Sold all my Apple stock a few days ago.

    2. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by BigBuckHunter · · Score: 0, Troll

      However, and advertisement disguised as an article is still and advertisement.

      Slashdot also doesn't want to drop below their 3-a-day Apple smear quota. It's been really sad to see as of late. It's funny that most of the comments are from people calling Slashdot on their BS though.

    3. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple has a near infinite supply of money in hand. They can buy themselves into any market they want. Selling their stock is dumb unless you're a day trader.

    4. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cayenne8 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      This would be nice (and I"m a Linux fan, my day job involves Linux servers)....but this linux laptop offering while being nice spec wise....will it run the programs I need it for....Photoshop, Davinci Resolve. I like FCPX, but could do Premier Pro....

      Trouble is, none of these run on Linux. DaVinci Resolve does have a linux version, but not the FREE version....

      I do my artsy stuff on the mac...I'm still refusing to rent my software, so for all the Adobe stuff, I have OS X versions of CS6 suite....so, I was hoping for a nice mac to upgrade to.

      I was actually hoping against hope that they'd have an upgraded 5K iMac ready for market that had a boosted GPU and more graphics RAM available....or even an upgraded Mac Pro.

      I'm still able to work with what I have, and can hang on a bit longer...but at some point.....well.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    5. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by msmash · · Score: 5, Funny

      Everything sounds like a plug when you think about it.

    6. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by msmash · · Score: 4, Insightful

      People continue to submit Apple-stuff all day. Maybe you could submit the things you would like to see on the front page and then we can have a conversation.

    7. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by saloomy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For System76, and other comparisons, the new MacBook Pro is always going to come out 10-20% more expensive because you can not really compare the laptops.

      Yes, for most of the components like RAM, CPU, Disk, etc, etc, etc, you can order a similarly built laptop. But in no laptop I have seen can you order a separate ARM CPU to power a part of the keyboard, none of them will come with fans that reduce noise by having blades configured with unequal spacing (like the Macbook Pro has), and none of them will of course be licensed to run OS X (if that's your thing). Apple computers are expensive compared to the rest of the market on a spec vs. spec order, but thats OK.

      You can of course go to Amazon and order the components and build a desktop, cheaper than an iMac, you can order a Dell laptop cheaper than Apple. Why? Because Apple will price their products to reflect the development costs and engineering expense they invest to design and deliver new parts, services, and experience. System76 does not develop any of the parts they install in their laptops, they design a package using off-the-shelf components sold by Intel, Samsung, Synaptic, and others, then put a label on it. Apple went through the expense of building the touch bar (whatever you may think about it, it wasn't free). They have Touch-ID on the laptop (also not free), and that required the Secure Element (also not free), and to design and deliver those components, of course the price is going to be more expensive, they had the cost of building those components which the other laptops do not account for.

      But if you buy a laptop to run Linux, you would be ill-advised to buy a Mac. It's extremely unlikely Apple will release Linux drivers for their touch-bar, touch-id, or other components that require OS X to deliver that integrated experience. Apple do not try to deliver a "me too" laptop, they would be killed in the free market if they attempted that. They deliver a product that has differentiators other manufacturers are unable to "me too", at least at the off-set, and the price will reflect that. So i you are a budget conscious consumer, you should be looking into System-76. Those laptops will cost you less and be just as fast rendering your designs, running your programs, and doing the other things you might use it for.

    8. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fluffernutter · · Score: 5, Insightful

      None of the extra stuff you mentioned is enough to make me go 'wow I want to pay for that'. If Apple wants to through extra stuff in to distinguish themselves then fine, but really, metal case versus plastic case, fans that reduce noise, these are all cheap gimmicks, not things that make a laptop a prermium one.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    9. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TWX · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I will say this much. It's a very well written "press release" which essentially is and ad, but on the other hand I only knew of one Linux-ready laptop that was vendor-supported out of th box, and that is the very expensive option from Dell.

      I've been holding-off on a laptop because last time I bought a new laptop to put Linux on, it had a problem with how the real time clock was handled and it was essentially not usable as a Linux box. I've put it on used laptops since then (like the Alienware M17R2 that I'm typing this on) but I hadn't seen any good sources for immediately-supported hardware. This fixes that and gives me some thought as to what I am going to do in the future, especially since the Late-2011 Macbook Pro that I'm using has the video-chipset problem that I need to take in for recall-fix, and it's getting long in the tooth anyway.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    10. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by houstonbofh · · Score: 1

      Saying that it cost a lot of money do provide this shit sandwich still does not make me want a shit sandwich. A lot of people do not like the idea of a software defined button bar.

    11. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      None of the extra stuff you mentioned is enough to make me go 'wow I want to pay for that'.

      Bingo.

      Yeah, some of the stuff is interesting, but not interesting enough to make me buy it.

      I've never found fan noise to be a big deal, and as long as a case is durable I don't care if it's metal or plastic. The touch bar thingy is okay but not a killer "must have" feature for me.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    12. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      So as someone who has compared, can you offer some insight into why someone would buy a Mac instead of a high end Linux machine? Hardware compatibility perhaps?

      It just seems like it was always a no-brainer. Much cheaper, similar build quality, better specs, lighter weight... I suppose for a while Macs had better touch pads and a few things like that, but you gave up a lot of expandability and upgrade options. What was it about the older machines that was attractive?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    13. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by peragrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      From 2004- 2012 ish Apple laptops could compete spec for spec and come out reasonably priced. Now their price hasn't changed much but the costs of components have dropped a lot. I actually like OS X. I haven't had to fiddle with OS settings or roll back patches in 13 years since I switched. How ever while I need a new laptop the new Mac pros are just expensive.

       

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    14. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by smash · · Score: 2

      Have still yet to find a competing laptop that gives me real world 10 hour battery life in the same form factor as my macbook pro retina 13". Have still to find a competing machine with a trackpad worth shit. I'll pay the apple tax, gladly, for these things. MacOS is gravy.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    15. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Its gotta be a marketing ploy. Are there really a ton of Apple fans out there that know who the heck System76 is? I'm a fan (who is also underwhelmed with the new offerings), but I didn't rush over to System76, because I've never heard of them until today. But they're getting good press today, I bet.

    16. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I only got 1/4 of the way through the summary before the rotten smell of really bad ad overwhelmed me. I call 100% total bullshit on this "surge"

    17. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jimbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with your first sentence but respectfully disagree with the rest; these things are exactly what makes a laptop a premium one and I think it's fair enough. If I had lots of disposable income I'd buy one in a heartbeat. I like macOS too but to be fair I can use any OS, I'm not religious, I dropped religion after the great OS/2 flame wars.

      I still have my 2006 Macbook Pro and apart from the battery it's almost like new, after all these years even moving parts like the fans are in perfectly good condition..

      I replaced it with a cheap Clevo because I play games and I'm on a tighter budget now. I'd run Kubuntu on the Clevo but GuildWars 2 ran like crap on Linux last I tried, so Windows it is.

    18. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So as someone who has compared, can you offer some insight into why someone would buy a Mac instead of a high end Linux machine? Hardware compatibility perhaps?

      I've tried using Ubuntu Linux as a primary laptop several times now, and I still always end up back with a Mac. For me, it's partly functional (a full Unix subsystem with an attractive, useful window manager), partly inertia (I've built up a comfortable and functional workflow with particular apps and utilities that would be disruptive, though not impossible, to replace), and partly aesthetics - with the exception of my old IBM thinkpad, my MBP is the best quality and best feeling hardware build I've used.

      Yes, I could get a cheaper system if cost were the only consideration; Yes, I could get better specs if I needed; However, specs aren't that big of a deal for me - with the exception of no available BTO upgrade beyond 16 GB of RAM, my current 3-year-old MBP is sufficient for my needs. What distinguishes the Mac from Linux for me is primarily the software functionality, and the hassle of replacing my entire workflow.

      Now, at some point, Apple may drive me away and make the hassle of replacement worth the expense... but for now, it's still just too much hassle for too little return to convert away.

    19. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By your logic, Mercedes are just Kia's with 'gimmicks'? How can you completely dismiss the user experience? I had a System76 and found it flimsy. I replaced it with a MBP because I don't like spending my day working on a flexy, plastic machine.

    20. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Why bother? This place has gone severely downhill in recent years. It's gone from being an actual news source for people in the industry to basically a linux fanboi circle jerk for shitting on Apple or Microsoft as much as possible.

      Uh... Slashdot has *always* been a linux circle jerk shitting on everyone else... what are you? New here?

    21. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You will be the last account on Slashdot to give it up and ditch Apple. You're stuck with that username. You do wear it well.

    22. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      I lost interest when i saw "Ubuntu Linux". Welcome to 2009. Since then Canonical murdered their own OS and we've had to spread ourselves across a dozen others.

    23. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      get outta here faggot

    24. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Slashdot also doesn't want to drop below their 3-a-day Apple smear quota. It's been really sad to see as of late. It's funny that most of the comments are from people calling Slashdot on their BS though.

      I'm a long time Mac owner (25+ years), and I was disappointed in their recent offerings. I certainly didn't see anything compelling that would get me to want to upgrade from my 2011 17" MacBook Pro. If I was in the market for a new laptop and I was an open source developer, I might consider going Linux as well.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    25. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      The problem is advertising isn't necessarily bad. Because otherwise how will people know that you are trying to sell a product.
      Now if System76 Lied about having so much traffic that would be bad advertising.

      If the company, is honest about their product, advertises it in a way that doesn't hinder our privacy/security/safety. Then that should be Ok.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    26. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by 31415926535897 · · Score: 1

      Everything sounds like a plug when you think about it.

      Look at this, now they're trying to shove slashvertisements in the comments! It's clear this was a plug, too...

    27. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk about bullshit, delusional adverts.

    28. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by macs4all · · Score: 0

      I was actually hoping against hope that they'd have an upgraded 5K iMac ready for market that had a boosted GPU and more graphics RAM available....or even an upgraded Mac Pro.

      Quad-Core Kaby Lakes are holding up the upgraded iMac and Mac mini. When those drop, look for an upgraded iMac, mini, and likely an upgraded Mac Pro.

    29. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by serviscope_minor · · Score: 3, Funny

      Everything sounds like a plug when you think about it.

      Except a socket.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    30. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good thing apple has people like you to shill for them voluntarily to balance it all out :)

    31. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why bother? This place has gone severely downhill in recent years. It's gone from being an actual news source for people in the industry to basically a linux fanboi circle jerk for shitting on Apple or Microsoft as much as possible.

      Look at my UID. I barely bother to log in here any more and rarely even open the site any more because there's nothing here of value any more. If i wanted to read idiots just basically trying to crap on hardware they've never used, i'd go read phoronix.

      Are you serious? UID 1351 and you think that "just *now*" slashdot has become a Linux fanboi site? You're aware of the "but does it run Linux" meme?

    32. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, bring back the days of the Bill Gates Borg icon when Slashdot was less linux fanboi circle-jerk... I think you've got some rosy glasses there fella.

    33. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But in no laptop I have seen can you order a separate ARM CPU to power a part of the keyboard

      The fact that the keyboard needs an ARM CPU to operate is rather telling.

      Of course, you could have mentioned that it's because of the OLED Touch Bar, but leaving that out makes it sound like it's a plain old keyboard that needs a whole ARM CPU because it's poorly designed.

    34. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I agree with your first sentence but respectfully disagree with the rest; these things are exactly what makes a laptop a premium one and I think it's fair enough. If I had lots of disposable income I'd buy one in a heartbeat.

      You haven't ever looked at (eg.) Thinkpads then? Much better built and specced than anything Apple makes.

      Not every non-Apple laptop is a $300 throwaway piece of plastic junk...

      --
      No sig today...
    35. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      So you messed up. Not every non-apple laptop is a piece of throwaway plastic junk. Thinkpads (for example) are mil-spec ruggedness and better compute specifications than Apple - you can get i7s, etc.

      --
      No sig today...
    36. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 2

      From 2004- 2012 ish Apple laptops could compete spec for spec and come out reasonably priced.

      This probably reflects that they've obtained the market that they want, and now want to milk some money out of it. They screwed up on RAM and they screwed up on graphics, and both choices seem to be mostly about avoiding products with higher margins to chip vendors than anything else. SkyLake I would argue is the correct choice, if they have to release in October, Kaby Lake doesn't have anything I would want in a pro-laptop yet. So in this sense they probably could have used the lower margin chip and kept customers happy.

      The Touch Bar I understand slashdot will pan because, somehow, the culture here has been dominated by technophobia. I see a lot of use for it in my day to day life, I am happy to have the meaning of my function keys reflected on an active display, I will pay some money for it. The success of this seems more dependent on developer support than anything else, and that's going to be weak if people don't buy the laptop...and it's not looking good. Maybe they shouldn't let marketing choose specs.

    37. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 2

      Haven't looked very hard, have we?

      eg. http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/l...

      --
      No sig today...
    38. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Arkham · · Score: 0

      It clearly sounds like an advert. I've never heard of "system76" -- because they're nobody. You've always been able to get a cheap no-name PC with cheap components for less than Apple. This has been true for 15+ years.

      The problem is, when you're done, you have a cheap PC with a crappy user experience. We use macOS because it's better than Windows for engineers who develop outside the Windows ecosystem, and it's better than Ubuntu for almost everyone (exceptions apply of course). I would certainly use Ubuntu before I used Windows, but it doesn't hold a candle to macOS for convenience, software availability, and general usability.

      If I DID want a PC, I wouldn't get one from them anyway. I'd get a nice sleek high-quality hardware design and then put Ubuntu on it. There are PC manufacturers that make nice hardware these days.

      --
      - Vincit qui patitur.
    39. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jellomizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apple has been on records even with Jobs, on producing a bunch of flops.
      That design that was a bit too far out (iMac G4, G4 Cube).
      Tried to make something too ahead of its time and expensive (Lisa, Apple ]|[)
      Tried to make technology without a good infrastructure (Newton)
      Tried to get into markets no one wanted Apple in (Pippen)

      Apples Laptop design is essentially the same as G4 Titanium Powerbook. From 2002. Apple is starting to get ThinkPad level of boring.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    40. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1, Troll

      You mean, its gone down hill because the Slashdot groupthink is no longer aligned with your own personal opinions? Did you give a fuck about that when that groupthink supported your opinions while trashing anyone who dared to like Microsoft? Didn't think so.

      The new Macs are shit. The event was underwhelming. Sorry, but thats just what most people think. And I've been using Macs since around 2000 - I've just had to buy a new iMac infact (desperately wanted an update last week, didn't happen, couldn't hold out - luckily its a company purchase rather than a personal one).

    41. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      The answer is software: Adobe CS, Microsoft Office, FCP, Garage Band etc etc etc. Also, if you are an iOS developer, Xcode.

      Plus the machines are really nice. My nephew has a six year old MacBook Pro that was handed down from me to my brother and thence to him. It won't play the latest games and its disk now seems glacial compared to an SSD, but it's still absolutely fine for most things and it's still fully functional except it had the battery replaced at three years.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    42. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by mspohr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      We have two MacBooks in our family and both are old, slow, out of date. I was waiting for the "refresh"... however, it's just underwhelming.
      I bought a Chromebook a few months ago because my 2010 Macbook was getting to the point where it was unusable. Very happy with the Chromebook at a fraction of the price of the Macbook. It's much more responsive than the Macbook. I've also set up Crouton so I have native Ubuntu with just a tab key screen shift when I need it. This Chromebook also has a touch screen which I like. I'll replace the other Macbook with a Chromebook also.
      Sorry Apple.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    43. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by wile_e_wonka · · Score: 1

      Not only is there no actual evidence of anyone (most particularly not "Apple loyalists") looking at the System76 website, it's just a horrible comparison. Like, Apple to something-else-with-a-comparable-computer would have been better. According to System76, the "Onyx" system is 5.5 pounds and .9-1.1 inches thick. They're made of black plastic. Part of what people are paying Apple for is a sleek .59 inch thick 3 pound machine carved from a solid aluminum block. That will cost extra. It will also fit fewer hard drives and ports.

      A much better comparison would have been to something like, perhaps, the HP Spectre (which also has only USB-C ports it appears....).

    44. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i'm sure that issue was fixable, probably had a fix but sometimes you have to actually look around, not everything is served on a silver platter with a fruit logo

    45. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2

      Further to my other post, if you want reasons why people think Apple have lost their way, think about it like this.

      I can drop several grand ($3,000 minimum) on a Mac Pro which hasn't been updated in 3 years, but still had a price increase in the UK last week - however, Apple won't sell me a compatible monitor, because they are "no longer in the standalone monitor business" and their only monitors on their store right now use yet *another* connectivity method beyond all those they introduced, one which isn't available on that brand new Mac Pro that just cost me several grand.

      So you can't buy a working Mac Pro bundle via Apple any more - which becomes an issue if you are sticking all this on finance, because you now have to go fund your compatible 4K monitors using a second finance agreement elsewhere. The same goes for the Mac Mini.

      Oh, and of course, all the complete fuck ups with the various connector issues and incompatibilities between the new Macbook Pros and the new iPhones.

      Apple just caused half the internet to face palm. Hard.

    46. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by b0bby · · Score: 1

      Apple will price their products to reflect the development costs and engineering expense they invest to design and deliver new parts, services, and experience.

      Up to a point that's true. In this case, however, I read an article which argued that the price hike had more to do with repositioning the Macbooks as the highest end of a continuum of products. Basically they need to be a reasonable jump up from the ipad pro, hence the new price. I tend to think that's the case, rather than them trying to recoup R&D costs.

    47. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do wonder how hard it would be to get some of that working via Gnustep.

    48. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What is this fiction that the Lenovo trackpad is ok? There is no comparison with the trackpad on the MBP retina.

      On planes I bring a mouse with me rather than use the Lenovo track pad. It's that bad.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    49. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, do you understand that you complaining about DaVinci Resolve not being free is funny to most?

      You actively spend upwards of $500 (according to the summary) more than you need to in order to purchase a specific brand of laptop, yet you balk at spending $400 more if you move to Linux. After a couple laptops, you would have made your money back and then some (assuming you don't buy anything else)

    50. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lucm · · Score: 1

      I don't know how they do it because they don't spend tons on marketing to promote their "engineering" like Apple, but Thinkpads (and other business-class Lenovos) are very, very quiet. A lot more than Macbooks.

      I used to work in a quiet open-plan floor and the guy two seats over had a Mac and I could hear his fan more than mine.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    51. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's gone from being an actual news source for people in the industry to basically a linux fanboi circle jerk for shitting on Apple or Microsoft as much as possible.

      Aren't those two synonymous? It's nice to have one site with a pro-user POV instead of shilling for the advertisers.

    52. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most laptops (especially work) have had Touch scanners, secure elements. Nobody gives a fuck about the touch bar because most laptops have full touchscreens for cheaper.

      Most hardware you find on any computer are off-the-shelf as well. SSD, RAM, etc. Most of what you say they built other companies had to do so as well with other things and usually with more variation and less one-device-carbon-cpied for economies of scale.

      So yeah, it's just straight up cheaper to buy anything else because they don't have to feed into APL's massive profits. Their margins are HUGE, way more than needed to justify any additional R&D.

    53. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TWX · · Score: 1

      Actually at the time there was no RTC solution for the early AMD Athlon 64 with that particular chipset.

      You have to remember, with Linux there's always the chance that no one wants to work on a particular problem. Back in the early days of 802.11 I wrote to the guy that created the first 802.11b implementation to find out if he'd do one for 802.11a. Even offered to send him hardware. He declined. By the time 802.11a was supported, "g" was out and "n" was in the works, so the speed advantages of "a" were negated.

      Apparently the RTC issue was fixed. Two or three years later.

      --
      Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
    54. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by buchanmilne · · Score: 1

      "Mercedes are just Kia's with 'gimmicks'? How can you completely dismiss the user experience?"

      Kia's have the same (or better emgines), transmission, wheels, brakes and the rest of the transmission as a Mercedes? I didn't know that ...

    55. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Agreed. If System76 did a TV ad with some dorky looking salesbozo yelling at the top of his lungs (see many car ads), they'd be evil. If they ran an internet ad that spewed malware-infested popups, they'd be evil. I have no problem with good, truly informative ads, rare as they are.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    56. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      None of the extra stuff you mentioned is enough to make me go 'wow I want to pay for that'.

      Bingo.

      Yeah, some of the stuff is interesting, but not interesting enough to make me buy it.

      I've never found fan noise to be a big deal, and as long as a case is durable I don't care if it's metal or plastic. The touch bar thingy is okay but not a killer "must have" feature for me.

      I'd agree none of it is enough to make me go "wow, I need to upgrade", although I wouldn't argue against the upgrade for the faster processor and higher disk I/O. For the rest, I do like that it's metal, well built, and doesn't sound like a turbine when I log in.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    57. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Your post only makes sense if the thread had gone "I can't find a laptop that comes with OS X except for Apple" and then the response was a link to lenovo. He said "battery life". The response is appropriate.

      If you "like to run an OS that doesn't suck ass and doesn't require constant care and feeding like Linux or Windows", then you are full aboard the Mac Truck, honk honk. But that wasn't the topic.

    58. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lucm · · Score: 1

      Right now it's a bit like a bad tattoo, but there's a flip side; after a while his username will look ironic, like someone wearing an Experts Exchange t-shirt.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    59. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about that new improved socket you can get at a low low price from your local retailer?

    60. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying user experience isn't worth anything, I'm just saying Apple hasn't done enough with their user experience to be worth the cost.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    61. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Alan+Shutko · · Score: 2

      Well, here are my reasons.

      1. Runs macOS. I used Linux exclusively from 1994 to 2008. I like macOS better.

      2. Better hardware for my uses. I move around with my laptop everywhere (rarely use a desk) so battery life and weight are priorities to me. The hidpi display is something I will never give up. The trackpad performs way better (on Linux, I preferred the IBM capacitive tracepoint). Generally, you get better specs and lower price on a Linux machine only if you give up on having a lightweight device.

      3. Better hardware support. Suspend/resume ALWAYS WORKS. Getting a device from System76 that was specifically specced for Linux will get rid of a lot of problems, but as Ars Technica noticed recently there are ongoing problems with new hardware. Power management in general works much better under macOS and battery life is better as a result.

    62. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      I like macOS too but to be fair I can use any OS, I'm not religious, I dropped religion after the great OS/2 flame wars.

      Oh yeah, the great OS/2 flame wars, on USENET no less, most waged before AOL even got connected to the internet and even many currently here are going: "What's USENET? Wait, what's OS/2?" :)

      I still have my 2006 Macbook Pro and apart from the battery it's almost like new, after all these years even moving parts like the fans are in perfectly good condition..

      Mine's had the fan replaced, a whole $17 and about 20 minutes, and that was after 2 rounds of re-greasing it. The replacement's still running fine years later. The battery was replaced for free around 2010 because of a recall. It still works ok, although it runs 10.6, but it could be moved to 10.7. It's use as a browsing laptop is likely to end sometime soon. I guess I should get my "I'm outraged" post ready, because it's a 10+ year old laptop that's increasingly unsupported, by everyone.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    63. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by ninthbit · · Score: 1

      I've been on Slashdot since the 90s, it's ALWAYS been a M$ bashing, Linux fanboy site. The Mac opinions just happened to fluctuate with what they have going on. Lately that seems like a whole lot of nothing. They want that premium price, but don't really have much to show for it.

    64. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of the extra stuff you mentioned is enough to make me go 'wow I want to pay for that'. If Apple wants to through extra stuff in to distinguish themselves then fine, but really, metal case versus plastic case, fans that reduce noise, these are all cheap gimmicks, not things that make a laptop a prermium one.

      You might call extra cup holders in a car a cheap gimmick, but in what world is metal vs. plastic, less noise, etc. cheap gimmicks?

      Those things are what distinguish premium products in almost everything we buy for ourselves.

    65. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many new laptops have metal cases and some are completely fanless.

    66. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by hey! · · Score: 1

      Except the stuff that sounds like jerkbait.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    67. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Because Apple will price their products to reflect the development costs and engineering expense they invest to design and deliver new parts, services, and experience.

      That's partially true, but a lot of the extra cost is pure profit.
      Apple sells far less devices than Dell, HP, etc., bu they're far more profitable because the profit margins are much higher per unit. This info is clearly available on their quarterly reports.

    68. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to 2016 where we have this nifty technology called virtualization. Install windows in a virtual machine, and you can run all the windows software you want.

      Now a laptop probably won't have a 2nd graphics card that you can enable via PCI passthrough to the VM for photoshop video card acceleration. But honestly, if you are doing CAD/Graphics work that requires video acceleration, a laptop is the worst possible system to be purchasing in the first place.

    69. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      butthurt on you brand choice? maybe you can stop paying premium for crap sw and hw and be done with your stupidity afterwards

    70. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by saloomy · · Score: 1

      Both the P50, Lenovo's workstation laptop and the new MacBook Pro use Intel Core i7 6820 CPUs. But let's not allow dumb facts to ruin an otherwise great point. I like Lenovo laptops, it's just the root kits and malware that keep me away.

    71. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by flyingfsck · · Score: 0

      "I still have my 2006 Macbook Pro and apart from the battery it's almost like new, after all these years": That is the reason I buy Macbooks. Yes they cost a little more, but I tend to keep them twice as long as a cheaper machine and even at end of life, it still looks and works exactly the same as the day I bought it. It is better quality and better value for money in the long run.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    72. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by saloomy · · Score: 1

      But don't you like having the option to pass on it? If it's not for you, then you can shop the market for something else, I'd recommend a Microsoft Surface or a Dell; but there are so many to chose from. I'm sure you'll find one that fits your value-set. I found mine.

    73. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cayenne8 · · Score: 2

      Welcome to 2016 where we have this nifty technology called virtualization. Install windows in a virtual machine, and you can run all the windows software you want.

      Except,that doesn't often work well with applications that are, for instance, GPU heavy.

      I tried this....awhile back trying to run Windows and Photoshop, After Effects, etc...in VMWare on my mac.

      I wasn't able to get direct enough access to the hardware to run GPU intensive apps like After Effects.

      VMs are great for so many things, but anything that needs intensive interaction with hardware, especially the GPU....doesn't work so well with virtualization.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    74. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      Nope - I have a Thinkpad too. Not a bad machine, but not the same quality as my Macbook Pro and the Thinkpad looks tired and twice as old.

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    75. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      LOL, do you understand that you complaining about DaVinci Resolve not being free is funny to most?

      I don't see why you say that.

      The regular, free version of Davinci Resolve, is FREE...and it covers everything I need to do...I work single station, don't need to share with others in a group, I have my own noise filters, etc.

      Unfortunately this version is only available in Win/Mac versions.

      To get the linux version, you have to pay the Studio version which is $995.

      I do hope to, in the somewhat near future, buy a Black Magic Design camera, perhaps the Ursa Mini, in which case I'd get the Resolve Studio version free with that...but until then, I don't need to pay for Resolve Studio, but if they had the Free version also available in Linux, I'd hop on that for sure..and build out a machine dedicated especially to that application alone, especially since it is becoming viable to edit video with it, and I could get off the FCPX train for awhile....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    76. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by PIBM · · Score: 1

      And I always though it was ExpertSexChange and didn't care to look at those ads..

    77. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 2

      That testimonial sounds like a commercial for a homeopathic remedy where they aren't allowed to make specific claims.

      "Now I sleep better every night, and I know that it's because I take 3 suppositories before bed."

      but I tend to keep them twice as long as a cheaper machine

      So you're claiming that you buy Macbooks at the same time as cheaper laptops, and you keep the Macbooks twice as long? Or are you saying that "I keep the Macbook for a long time, and I know that it's because it's a high-quality Apple product."

      The only time I replace computers is when the current or previous-gen hardware is so much more powerful and at such a low price that it no longer makes sense to continue using the dinosaur that's still chugging away. An Apple logo on the case doesn't make the hardware relevant for any longer.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    78. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      "I use the Macbook Pro because my Thinkpad looks tired."

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    79. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The touchbar is just a poor design. It belongs to the bottom of the screen at best. It forces the user to move focus from the screen and onto the keyboard area, and unavles quick access to essential functions due to dynamism. Last thing anyone needs is to start an unwanted application when all was needed is to mute volume.

    80. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      after a while his username will look ironic

      We passed that point long ago. I think the last time you could claim "macs for all" was when every school was loaded with Apple ][ machines.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    81. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Quad-Core Kaby Lakes are holding up the upgraded iMac and Mac mini. When those drop, look for an upgraded iMac, mini, and likely an upgraded Mac Pro.

      Thanks for the insight.

      Wow..wondering why this simple reply got modded down to -1???

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    82. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. My choices aren't even the same for me under all circumstances. I'll buy a linux box when needed, although I'd be hard-pressed to figure out when I'd need anything from MS given all the trouble with that software not to mention lack of standard support. Even then I'm not against you purchasing anything from MS, just don't ask for access to my networks.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    83. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would have expected the writer to look at a few other linux companies, like Zareason. I don't love my Zareason laptop (display resolution and touchpad are disappointing), but indeed it looks as if this is just a reworking of what Sysem76 emailed to the writer..

    84. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lgw · · Score: 1

      msmash vs smash? Is this a couple's fight?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    85. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lgw · · Score: 1

      What's the current state of Office on Ubuntu? I'd hope now that we have Office on Android it would be somewhere. Anyone know? WINE working well yet for Office?

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    86. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cowdung · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      Hey.. I think my 2013 13" MacBook Pro is awesome.

      But all these new "features" the new one has add absolutely 0 value to the 2016 version, and in fact many REDUCE its value while increasing its price.

      The new MacBook is simply put: a Balmaresque Joke.

      Nadella scores... Cook gets a foul.

    87. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cowdung · · Score: 1

      Then just get the 2015 Mackbook Pro. Its a better machine!

    88. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by harperska · · Score: 4, Informative

      You haven't ever looked at (eg.) Thinkpads then? Much better built and specced than anything Apple makes.

      Except for the trackpad on ThinkPads, which is utter complete garbage.

    89. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its not based on fact?

    90. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by NotAPK · · Score: 3, Funny

      "I used to work in a quiet open-plan floor and the guy two seats over had a Mac and I could hear his fan more than mine."

      I think he was doing more work than you!

    91. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 0

      metal case versus plastic case, fans that reduce noise, these are all cheap gimmicks

      They're not cheap, and they're not gimmicks. Having a quiet machine matters if you're using it to record music for instance. Having a metal case significantly improves heat dissipation, again reducing noise, and is also far more robust. Macbook's machined aluminium cases do not break.

      But the real point of difference that macs have is that they run an entirely different operation system to everyone else. One that's most certainly not free to build, and is in my opinion light-years ahead of what either Linux of Windows have to offer. And that's not just from the point of view of the end-user either, under the hood OSX has a far, far better designed API then any competitor. Writing code to interact with the system is a joy. Not having to hunt down libraries to perform basic tasks like open image files, decode audio and video, connect to network services, etcetera etcetera, makes a developers life so much easier. Support for animation of UI elements makes building usable interfaces almost trivial.

      I know you probably don't like UI animation, and believe it to be a "cheap" gimmick. But it's certainly not cheap, building those APIs cost time and money, and there's no question that even very subtle and fast animations help enormously with usability.

      You don't want to pay for it. That's completely fine. Personally I'd be happier with removable and upgradable components, but on the other hand, my existing macbook pro is pretty heavy....

    92. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why is that trackpad offset to the left of the machine? I see this alot on Windows laptops. What's up with it? It just makes no sense whatsoever.

      Anyway. The trackpad looks shit. It is multitouch? Can I scroll any window using a two finger gesture even if that window doesn't currently have focus? Can I drag with three fingers? Show the desktop with four? Right click with a (silent) two finger tap?.

      No. Of course not. Because even if that trackpad did support multi-touch properly, Windows itself doesn't, and neither does Linux, making the support pointless.

      It's 2016. Linux people. Make something that's not a UI disaster area. And Windows people... maybe just give up.

    93. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

      Well, the bare facts reveal it isn't on par with what many look for. Gaming for example. The Apple laptop is a retina display not a 1080P display. The Apple display doesn't cost extra for a simple IPS display. The Onyx is thicker, and has less bandwidth for the ports. 4 Thunderbolt 3 ports are hard to beat. Can the Onyx support two external 5K displays or 4 4K external displays? Can I take a broken Onyx into a brick and mortar and get it swapped or repaired ... Can I use it on a cross country flight or transcontinental flight or will the Onyx battery cut out since Oynx consumes more power and has significantly less watt hours. The "ad" fails to do a real comparison.

      --
      - Tjp

      I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

    94. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

      I doubt the metal body is more durable than a thinkpad. In fact I have proof; I dropped a thinkpad on the surface of a macbook from my bed once and the macbook dented fairly easily. I would accept your case for heat dissipation if the head from a macbook didn't otherwise need to be vented through the keyboard which is another known flaw.

      I'm a developer, and I don't find OSX a joy to develop on. I'm constantly having trouble sizing windows to fullscreen properly; xcode absolutely refuses to go fullscreen on my 4:3 monitor, it only seems to want to do 16:9, leaving a big gap at the bottom. XCode also has a lot of other frustrating quirks such as not being able to undock many views such as the application log and treat them as a separate window. I would allow to be able to double click on a source file and have it open in a tab instead of a separate window, or have xcode show me the real folder structure instead of some pretend virtual structure. There are fewer hotkeys for traversing through code such as finding all references, etc. it almost seems to me that Apple wanted to force people to develop on a mac so they came up with XCode as a minimal tool to use in order to be able to draw people to the platform.

      As a developer, efficiency is all about having my keys not leave the keyboard yet they keep adding gestures to the touchpad without adding alternative hotkeys on the keyboard for traversing history etc. Now with the touch strip Apple seems even more hell bent on making my hands and eyes wander. I do development with linux and IntelliJ as much as I can because it is the setup that seems to be tuned for work. Macs are just tuned for fluff and people who never stop being entertained by fades and sweeps and swoops, and are easily distracted by how inefficient it is compared to other platforms.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    95. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      It's called 'engineering'.

      Lenovo do it better than Apple. Look at how many Apple hinges break, etc.

      --
      No sig today...
    96. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Some of us like to run an OS that doesn't suck ass and doesn't require constant care and feeding like Linux or Windows.

      I own a MacBook. I pretty much hate the OS. It makes me want to scream every time I have to use it. I have no idea what Mac users are on about.

      --
      No sig today...
    97. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      On planes I bring a mouse with me rather than use the Lenovo track pad. It's that bad.

      Why don't you just take your MacBook Pro?

      --
      No sig today...
    98. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by narcc · · Score: 2

      I turn off most mouse gestures as I tend to trigger them accidentally, and at the worst possible times.

      Overloading an otherwise simple and intuitive control with a bunch of useless features that act like traps for the uninitiated is what I'd call a "UI disaster".

    99. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Because its not based on fact?

      Prove it.

      Note that every other Quad-Core lappy released in the past few months is also Skylake (or rarely, Xeon).

      Ever wonder why?

    100. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      disk now seems glacial compared to an SSD

      If it's a macbook pro with an HDD, put a third-party SSD in it today. Buy a cheap USB to SATA adaptor, use "Carbon Copy Cloner" to copy your entire system into the SSD (this takes several hours, obviously, but it works perfectly), swap the drives over, and you're done. Mine has a 1TB SSD in it, and there's no greater or more dramatic upgrade possible for any computer. You won't regret it.

    101. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      I've had several Apple laptops and never had a hinge break. If your hinge breaks, it's because you're abusing the shit out of it. The hinge is quite sturdy.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    102. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly, the Thinkpads we bought at our company (X1 Carbon) are fairly unreliable (lots of weird power board and video controller issues) as compared to our Macbook Pros and Dell Latitudes we have deployed enterprise wide, plus the first gen USB3.0 docks suck for any serious work (the new OneLink docks are better). We've mostly switched back to the Dell Latitude 74xx series, aside from the occacional X1 Yoga for people that can use the touchscreen.

    103. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This would be nice (and I"m a Linux fan, my day job involves Linux servers)....but this linux laptop offering while being nice spec wise....will it run the programs I need it for....Photoshop, Davinci Resolve. I like FCPX, but could do Premier Pro....

      While Apple's bread-and-butter has long been supporting "artsy" stuff, I suspect that its major growth areas in the OSX era have been non-artsy professionals, home-users & students who have appreciated a high-end alternative to Windows that "just works".

      It really seems to me that the consumer product tail is wagging the dog these days.

    104. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that the macbook case doesn't dent. It's made of metal, and it does if you hit it hard enough. However, it doesn't break, and it can stand up to much more abuse than plastic-bodies machines can. The thinkpad is a pretty sturdy machine, but it's trackpad does suck compared to the macbooks.

      However, you do have some fair points about xcode. I don't have a 4:3 monitor, but I do use BetterTouchTool to help me resize windows to full screen by dragging them to the top of the display. You should give that a try, if you haven't already. Double-clicking on a file opening in a window is pretty annoying, I agree, but I was talking about OSX's APIs, and the design and architecture of the system. Xcode is the best free IDE that I know of, but it's no Visual Studio. Although, interface builder is fairly great - provided you don't mind dragging and dropping alot.

    105. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And mine of the same vintage suffered the common motherboard CPU / delamination and subsequent bricking.

    106. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we've got Wine for running Windows apps on Linux/Mac. Is there anything in the works to run MacOS apps on Linux?

    107. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > the new MacBook Pro is always going to come out 10-20% more expensive because you can not really compare the laptops. Any by 10-20% you mean 20-30%, right? The 2,400 is the *base* price, for the *shit* spec. System76's lowest spec was higher, and cheaper.

    108. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe this one will catch your interest. They last a loooootttttt!!!
      I've also expend the last few days trying to find that Holy Grail and, sadly, doesn't exist. I'll have to buy a Macbook Pro. On the System76 battery life? Size? Weight?
      The closest match is the XPS 13" (a blatant copy of the Macbook. iFixit dixit). And when you configure the system with the same options the price difference is in the order of $100 and $200.
      But, to the point, yeah there "expensive" (or as I like to say "the new normal", wait when you buy your next whatever) but they last a lot. I have 4 Apple computers, the oldest ones migrated to Linux (sorry, no more Mac OS upgrades), and you know what? They work perfectly well.

    109. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is starting to get ThinkPad level of boring.

      You haven't been paying much attention then since Apple has been worse than ThinkPad boring since before IBM sold it to Lenovo.

    110. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a butthurt crapplehead.
      This macbook "pro" is retarded, does half of what the prior generation offered. And the emoji bar is purely stupid, utterly useless, ugly design-wise, and in fact is detrimental to productivity.

    111. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, I own a retina MBP but reading this on my corporate T540p and I can't beleive how can anyone claim Macbook is particulary quiet. It's prettier tho (OTOH, s540 that our non-dev users get are even prettier than a MBP, tho slightly underpowered). In fact, the only serious downside to my ThinkPad is the looks and perhaps the fact that you actually CAN click the touchpad which is actually a usability antipattern despite sounding more usable on paper.

    112. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't even care that it's an advert (although i'm very interested about the spike in sales), since I had never heard of System76 and they make exactly what I'm looking for in a laptop - Linux based, powerful.

    113. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is that trackpad offset to the left of the machine? I see this alot on Windows laptops. What's up with it? It just makes no sense whatsoever.

      Anyway. The trackpad looks shit. It is multitouch? Can I scroll any window using a two finger gesture even if that window doesn't currently have focus? Can I drag with three fingers? Show the desktop with four? Right click with a (silent) two finger tap?.

      No. Of course not. Because even if that trackpad did support multi-touch properly, Windows itself doesn't, and neither does Linux, making the support pointless.

      It's 2016. Linux people. Make something that's not a UI disaster area. And Windows people... maybe just give up.

      This is very, very wrong. Both Linux and Windows support multitouch, and have for a long time. On this ~2.5 year old ASUS laptop I'm using right now running Windows 10, it supports up to 4 finger gestures, edge swiping, top/down swiping, pinch/zoom, etc. The laptop I had before this had the same features (Windows 7, Linux)

      captcha: "modern"

    114. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by SimonTheSoundMan · · Score: 1

      Apple have had an ARM CPU in the trackpad and keyboard controller for years. Nothing new here.

    115. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe spend a little time reading about how it will actually work?

      From The Verge:

      The most useful keys will stick round in most contexts (that includes brightness and volume controls on the far right, and the escape key on the far left), but the rest will change based on what you're doing, with third-party developers able to add their own functionality.

    116. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the jobs bubble exploding.

      Yeah, their servers croaking when 500 visitors come in a day instead of 300 sure sounds like a "jobs bubble exploding".

    117. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Console apps only, but it's a start:

      https://www.darlinghq.org/project-status/

    118. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. See the first news item in the Slashdot Suck parody from 1999.

    119. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      However, and advertisement disguised as an article is still and advertisement

      And interesting.
      And news.
      And for nerds.

      Let's keep this stuff up please.

    120. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jsdcnet · · Score: 2

      You should try again. I use all the trackpad gestures. They're a huge boon to productivity. I can't even remember the last time I had a misfire.

      --
      no longer working for cnet
    121. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      My screen isn't shitty. It's 17 inches. It's heavy, but it's also got 2.5TB of storage space. Life's a trade off.

      Or was that a lame attempt at denigrating System76 Ultrabooks?

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    122. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > By your logic, Mercedes are just Kia's with 'gimmicks'?

      Except Apple products are no Mercedes. They're more like a Lincoln. They're the same internals as a Ford with some superficial bits that are different.

      Since Macs are now just x86 PCs, that's more true than it ever was.

      Now an actual Mercedes is overpriced and has unnecessary proprietary elements that are bothersome. You're overpaying for an over hyped logo.

      I don't think you've ever done so much as test driven a Mercedes.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    123. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      More flops without even mentioning the new laptops:

      o Trashcan mac "pro" w/no expandable internal storage, no card bus, no drive bays - garbage
      o Downgraded mini - they actually made this product intentionally. Fewer cores, less maintainable, less expandable
      o Ports missing (you name it -- ethernet, headphone, std USB... idiocy)
      o OS X flops like "app nap", breaking the USB drivers, breaking the tooltip and dropdown mechanisms used by years of apps
      o Early (and completely uncalled for) software-imposed obsolescence of VERY expensive, powerful and very useful machines
      o Straight-up leaving hardware with broken OS X that didn't do what Apple claimed it would do
      o crippled 1-gen "airs" that they would not fix and which would lose their minds after sleeping even once
      o I'm embarrassed to even carry my iPad anymore. The OS looks like someone in nursery school designed the icons / look
      o Yeah, there's more, but hell, that's enough ...I used to be quite the Apple fan. Because of my two, 8-core mac pros circa 2008, and the early minis. At this point, I just look at Apple and think "that's exactly how not to do things."

      Sure, there are plenty of people who will queue up and buy their latest junkware. They have done nothing to retain me as a buyer of new hardware. And the really sad thing, I think, is that I would buy a couple new mac pros. Even with the design 3-years old now. If they weren't such unmitigated form-over-function cockups. Luckily, there's EBay, and there are great machines available prior the new-Apple-fuckupery geological age.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    124. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Lol. You have no idea until you own one. All the bargain basement people cling to their thrift like it is a choice. It is not. You have no choice because you simple can not afford it. Period.

      No. You just need to desperately justify your purchase in order to avoid feeling like a moron.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    125. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > The Touch Bar I understand slashdot will pan because, somehow, the culture here has been dominated by technophobia.

      It's an interesting idea as an ADDITION, not something that comes at the cost of standard functionality.

      If anything, it reminds me of the function key overlays from the days of DOS and certain 80s game consoles. It's by no means a new idea.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    126. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by armanox · · Score: 1

      And yet Dell and Lenovo both offer solid machines (metal/carbon fiber) with far superior specs (i7s/Xeons, up to 64GB RAM, RAID, Quadro GPUs, 4K displays) and all the security nonsense, for comparable or even less cost. Once upon a time a MacBook Pro competed with a Thinkpad or a Latitude/Precision, but in more recent times they've fallen so far behind the "Pro" label is laughable at best.

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    127. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by armanox · · Score: 1

      I've got to agree that somewhere along the way Lenovo lost it with their trackpads. I am, however, quite happy with the one on my Precision M4500 and the one on the M4600-4800 (haven't tried the 7510/7710 yet). I know some of the Latitude's have horrible pads on them these days though. On the flip side, I can't stand the keyboard on the MacBook Pro (my own 2012 or on a retina based one)

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    128. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by armanox · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it's more that people are unhappy with Apple's latest round of disasters and wanted to see actual upgrades instead of "look - it's thin enough to shave with" as a new feature? Has nothing to do with a smear campaign since users still submit the articles - it's just that no one seems to see value in what Apple has been doing (they desperately need Steve back...).

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    129. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by macsforme · · Score: 1

      If Apple puts a quad core chip back in the mini, I will be surprised. But I will also be very happy and will go buy one.

    130. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by damnbunni · · Score: 1

      I dunno about that guy, but for me it's been this:

      The ways that Macs suck annoy me less than the ways Linux or Window suck.

      All computers suck. The trick is to find the one whose suckiness annoys you the least. This varies from person to person, a lot.

    131. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      Seconded. There's an interesting feature in an application called BetterTouchTool that shows you what the trackpad picks up. It can easily tell the difference between a three-finger drag (for example), and the palm of your hand. It's impressive. Added to which you can even have the thing learn new gestures.

    132. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 things:

      I can get KDE neon running in live mode on my 2015 macbook pro. no backflips needed.

      second these system76's are 1 lbs heaver and 1cm thicker and bigger overall. The portability of a 13" macbook with bootcamp is pretty good. the system76's is 15" is a 5 pound beast.

    133. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by saloomy · · Score: 2

      I'm not saying user experience isn't worth anything, I'm just saying Apple hasn't done enough with their user experience to be worth the cost to me. - FTFY

    134. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is starting to get ThinkPad level of boring.

      If Apple's laptop is as functional as a ThinkPad, that would be fine. Professional devices don't need to be -- and probably shouldn't be -- exciting.

    135. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All trackpads are garbage.

      Fortunately Thinkpads have the eraser style mouse. At least, I hope they still have those. Haven't needed to by a Thinkpad in a while since both of mine are still working fine.

    136. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      If you break it down item by item I'm sure most people would be shocked what Apple charges for so little. Apple sells systems because no one really thinks about what they are getting.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    137. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by maugle · · Score: 1

      Personally, if a laptop comes with fans, I like a little fan noise to reassure me that the fans aren't dead and are doing their job. Obviously, in a laptop without fans (a la most Chromebooks) I relish the silence, but powerful laptops need fans and I need to know they're working as expected.

    138. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your first sentence but respectfully disagree with the rest; these things are exactly what makes a laptop a premium one and I think it's fair enough. If I had lots of disposable income I'd buy one in a heartbeat.

      You haven't ever looked at (eg.) Thinkpads then? Much better built and specced than anything Apple makes.

      Not every non-Apple laptop is a $300 throwaway piece of plastic junk...

      I've used Linux since 1997., that was the year I compiled by first kernel. I've moved to Mac OS in 2008 and have not looked back since. I've never actually used Windows, save for two occasions. First was Windows NT, because they ran Visual Age for Java in 2000., which was a good option for Java dev. Second was under pressure from my employer from 2013-2016, using different Thinkpad and Lenovo Yoga laptops.

      I've never had a Macbook (Pro, Air, Original) break on me. I still have them all and they still all work - 5 of them.
      My Thinkpad came with a broken screen. Switched to Yoga. My touchpad broke. My keyboard broke. My motherboard broke. Twice.

      Apple is good stuff. Premium stuff.
      If you can not afford it or you have religious issues with Apple, that is fine.
      But that doesn't make it "not good stuff".

    139. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's bitztream, the autism-hating, custom EpiPen-hating, non-OSX(macOS)-hating Slashdot troll!

    140. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Technnophobia? On Slashdiot? Seriously?

      Can I buy some pot from you? ;)

    141. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enjoy your fat, heavy, low battery life, shitty screen, cheap looking System76 then. Personally, I'll take the MBP, (with a much higher resale value) over that pos any day of the week.

      For people wanting a light-weight notebook (ultrabook) computer to run GNU/Linux I recommend the Hewlett Packard Spectre 13. All features are supported by Xubuntu Linux which presumably means the majority of GNU/Linux distributions. The weight difference is noticeable especially if you are coming from a heavier notebook computer. I can get 12 hours a day on a single battery charge though I prefer keeping the screen brightness very low to reduce / prevent eye strain so your mileage might vary. I wish the ultrabook could be ordered with the option of a larger SSD, say a 512 GB SSD or 1 TB SSD. This would facilitate those of us who have to or want to keep Microsoft Windows 10 along with a GNU/Linux distribution without making compromises on disk space allocation.

    142. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by ahabswhale · · Score: 1

      "My screen isn't shitty. It's 17 inches."

      Compared to the MBP, it is. I don't have anything against the System76 laptops per se, but acting like it's on the same level of a MBP is just a joke.

      --
      Are agnostics skeptical of unicorns too?
    143. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is that trackpad offset to the left of the machine? I see this alot on Windows laptops. What's up with it? It just makes no sense whatsoever.

      The trackpad is offset to the left so that it's centered over the space-bar (and the main qwerty part of the keyboard). This is especially obvious on 17" laptops with a numpad (not offered in the Apple ecosystem). So it makes perfect sense from a functional point of view. Apple favours form over function and hence has made a different trade-off.

    144. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by xlsior · · Score: 1

      Why is that trackpad offset to the left of the machine? I see this alot on Windows laptops. What's up with it? It just makes no sense whatsoever.

      You'll typically see this on laptops that include an actual numerical keypay besides the keyboard, the trackpad is often centered below the standard part of the keyboard which theoretically makes it easier to switch back and forth between typing and using the trackpad. In practice I find it really annoying myself as well, and all things being equal I'd probably pay extra to have the trackpad in the center of the laptop instead.

    145. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Lenovo T460p running CentOS 7.2 absolutely destroys the Macbook Pro. Heh, i7 quad core (NOT the standard dual core hyperthreaded laptop i7), 32GB of RAM, 3k 14 inch display, 512GB SSD, NVIDIA graphics instead of the embedded Intel shit, all for about 1700 bucks.

    146. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by deathguppie · · Score: 1

      More to the point. Perhaps more people would use Linux if they actually tried it. Most people won't ever try it because it didn't come on their computer and what they have works well enough. Many people on this site, even if they don't use Linux as their primary desktop, know that Linux is a viable option because they are basically educated on the subject. It may sound like fanboyism but maybe there is just a bit of realism in it too.

      --
      once more into the breach
    147. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2010 macbook unusable is simply strange... why not just upgrade ram and ssd? I have 2008 macbook, and 2007 macbook pro , both with 4gb ram and ssd and totally perfectly usable , I even use them for live performance with Ableton and Traktor because they got firewire ports for my audio interfaces.
      I also have 2013 mbpro for studio work and it is not much faster.
      Instead of just throwing money at a problem , might wanna just fix it...

    148. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Having an ARM CPU control part of the keyboard is not a feature. It is merely an implementation detail.

    149. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Apple has not really told us why we want the new Macbook Pro instead of keeping the old Macbook Pros that are working just fine. Given the new model I suspect many customers would prefer a used Macbook Pro instead of a new one.

    150. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by myid · · Score: 1

      Tim Cook should encourage Apple's top hw and sw executives to speak their minds, and then listen to them. If they say, "Tim, that looks pretty but I wouldn't buy it because it's not practical", then Cook should have the design changed, so that the execs would want to buy it.

      About 15 years ago, Apple put out a new laptop computer (the TiBook?), and released a video about the design process. In the video, one of the engineers who worked on it said something like, "Steve didn't give us many instructions. He just told us to design the best laptop computer in the world." They designed a laptop that they themselves wanted to use. And they put out a very popular and successful computer.

      I can't find that video, but I did find this one. At 2:30, a customer says, "Well, forget about gorgeous. It's a G4. And it's five pounds. And it's got a five-hour battery life." He wanted that computer, not because of its looks, but because of its features and what it could do.

      Similarly, when Apple was designing the iPod, the design team created an portable music player that the team members wanted to use, and they put out a very popular product.

      Tim Cook should do the same thing. He should tell the people who design the next Mac hw or sw to design hw and sw that they would love and want to use.

    151. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      On planes I bring a mouse with me rather than use the Lenovo track pad. It's that bad.

      Why don't you just take your MacBook Pro?

      When I'm traveling on business I need my work laptop (the Lenovo) and I don't want to carry two laptops.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    152. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 2

      Enjoy your fat, heavy, low battery life, shitty screen, cheap looking System76 then. Personally, I'll take the MBP, (with a much higher resale value) over that pos any day of the week.

      Enjoy your delusion that I own an Apple laptop.

      I switched my Windows laptop over to Linux Mint months ago and never looked back.

      And not to put too fine a point on it, but you seem very tightly wound over this. Are you perhaps having buyer's remorse and lashing out in order to make yourself feel better? Because I've never seen such a dick-headed, partisan response to someone simply saying that the new shiny from Apple doesn't appeal to them.

      --
      Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
    153. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Previously they had yearly laptop / "PC" updates.
      So if it flops, you still got the previous year's models.

    154. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must be new here.

    155. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by tsa · · Score: 1

      It doesn't reflect that they habe obtained the market they want. It reflects that Steve is dead and Tim is prepared to trade usability for thinness. This of course will be tolorated for a while by the avid Apple fanboys but even they are losing patience now. If things go on like this Apple is nowhere by the time their new campus is finished.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    156. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot has *always* been a linux circle jerk shitting on everyone else

      Except for a few BSD-users shitting on the linux folks.

    157. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Shane_Optima · · Score: 1

      The Touch Bar I understand slashdot will pan because, somehow, the culture here has been dominated by technophobia.

      It's not technophobia to prefer full sized tactile function keys one can easily hit without looking at the keyboard. I'm all for incorporating little e-ink displays on the tops of real keys (I think I read something about that being in the pipeline recently?), but this thing is a clearly regression for anyone who uses their laptop for serious work.

      And let's get to the meat of why this change actually happened: to make the keyboard even smaller and the touchpad even bigger. Which is extremely stupid. Your touchpad doesn't need to be that big, really it doesn't. Maybe an "accessibility model" could be made for people who have actual medical disorders, but I'm not particularly gifted with fine-motor coordination and yet I could easily use something half that size. Also, I really, really prefer hard buttons that aren't built into the pad itself, giving the whole thing an unstable feel.

    158. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Maritz · · Score: 1

      Reselling a laptop? Fucking bizarre.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    159. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Puff_Of_Hot_Air · · Score: 1

      LENOVO?!?!! I have a brand new work version of one of these junky bits of rubbish that I would throw down the stairs if it weren't for the hassle of having to configure the new one they would give me. Sure it's quiet, but it's only quiet because the fan is underpowered so that the damn thing can't do any serious work without having to de-clock to stupid slow to reduce heat. Everything on this thing is crap, cheap, rubbishy. The battery lasts an hour if I'm lucky when doing anything slightly taxing. The touchpad is a sad joke of misery. The screen is a pathetic thing, miserable to behold. I have a 4 year old retina mac at home, and it does literally everything better. It's not just mine either, there has been no end of moaning since we all switched from HP to the latest and greatest "Lenovo" thinkpads (what a sad mockery of this once great trademark, come back IBM! All is forgiven!)

    160. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Titanium one?

      http://www.little-gamers.com/2001/01/12/137/

    161. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because I've never seen such a dick-headed, partisan response to someone simply saying that the new shiny from Apple doesn't appeal to them.

      Well, at least he didn't lie, macbookpro do indeed have great screens. That's the last thing they do better than the competition actually. Be nice, let him that while you actually do stuff on your computer.

    162. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, he needs to resell that macbook next year to buy the next one, duh. Why would people keep the same laptop for several years? Fucking bizarre.

    163. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

      None of the extra stuff you mentioned is enough to make me go 'wow I want to pay for that'. If Apple wants to through extra stuff in to distinguish themselves then fine, but really, metal case versus plastic case, fans that reduce noise, these are all cheap gimmicks, not things that make a laptop a prermium one.

      And of course, your needs and wants are everyone's needs and wants, right?

      Yeah, why don't they just get on board and have their wants and needs dictated by apple? Bloody plebs eh thinking they're too good for the kool aid.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    164. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by godefroi · · Score: 0

      If you're financing your computers, maybe you should buy cheaper computers.

      --
      Karma: Poor (Mostly affected by lame karma-joke sigs)
    165. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey.. I think my 2013 13" MacBook Pro is awesome.

      But all these new "features" the new one has add absolutely 0 value to the 2016 version, and in fact many REDUCE its value while increasing its price.

      Yeah, faster CPU and GPU, more storage, better screen with higher brightness and wider color gamut - those features all make the new MacBook Pro so much less worth than the old one. You're a fucking numbskull.

    166. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by MooseMiester · · Score: 1

      You left out the endless one sided political click bait flame wars over the same stupid topics that look like paid troll comment sections...

      --
      Murphy was an optimist
    167. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wife uses Windows for her job, but we both use Macs for personal use. Typically any at any given moment we'll have 4 Macs and 5 Windows machines in the house. Our Macs are years old an in perfect condition. All of the Windows laptops (HPs, Lenovos, and what not...) are broken. I've recycled many Windows machines but I'm using the same old Mac. To be fair, I did wear out the track pad I used with the iMac. I also wore out a Magic Mouse. In my experience, the Macs have turned out to be less expensive in the long run because I haven't replaced them, while the Windows laptops last only a couple of years. I hate OSX but I hate Windows more. I use Linux at work, and if it weren't for systems I'd use it at home too.

    168. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Radiophobic · · Score: 1

      Trying to avoid commenting in this kind of thread, but I got to chime in here. Trackpads are definitely the worst of all input methods. Being the best of the worst is not really a selling feature.

    169. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know how they do it because they don't spend tons on marketing to promote their "engineering" like Apple, but Thinkpads (and other business-class Lenovos) are very, very quiet.

      You mean they don't pay you well to claim that?

    170. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the laptops that I buy are capable of lasting for years. Macbooks are obsolete the instant they come out, that's why Apple customers are in need of annual upgrades.

    171. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My screen isn't shitty. It's 17 inches. It's heavy, but it's also got 2.5TB of storage space. Life's a trade off.

      Or was that a lame attempt at denigrating System76 Ultrabooks?

      And it has less pixels than the 13" MacBook Pro. Coincidently, it has as many pixels as the iPhone Plus. So keep on professionally working on your oversized phone display.

    172. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      quote ======

      I will say this much. It's a very well written "press release" which essentially is and ad, but on the other hand I only knew of one Linux-ready laptop that was vendor-supported out of th box, and that is the very expensive option from Dell.

      quote ========

      Provided you wish to learn a bit about Linux any reasonably specced laptop or desktop will cater for all your needs
      But people are software lazy and are reluctant to use alternative Linux apps , under the guise of "a requirement for imminent productivity" without additional learning.

    173. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by harperska · · Score: 1

      Meh, that's your opinion. The multitouch trackpad on macbooks combined with an OS designed for multitouch makes it a very good input method. Things like xy scrolling and pinch-to-zoom are features only a trackpad is good at. There is a reason desktop macs have an option for a peripheral trackpad instead of a mouse. People who don't use macs just have a perception that trackpads suck as an input method, because they have never had a chance to use one that doesn't suck.

    174. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      That referenced "system76" model is twice as big and weighs a pound more.

    175. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly this is a plug for a socket.

    176. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enjoy your fat, heavy, low battery life, shitty screen, cheap looking System76 then. Personally, I'll take the MBP, (with a much higher resale value) over that pos any day of the week.

      Yes of course everybody is just such a tightwad that cares more about what it looks like and how much you can sell it for than whether it is actually any good at being a tool to do a job. We get it, to you a laptop is a fashion accessory and you want to be able to sell it as soon as Apple releases their next fashion laptop so you can then buy that with minimal outlay.

    177. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had several Apple laptops and never had a hinge break. If your hinge breaks, it's because you're abusing the shit out of it. The hinge is quite sturdy.

      Good to know the Apple mantra of "if it doesn't work it's your fault" didn't die along with Steve Jobs.

    178. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by exomondo · · Score: 1

      They kind of are like Mercedes, but the really poor value midrange ones. They used to offer a highend E63, something well built and powerful but now even the best and most highend Apple laptop is worse performing than what you could get from even midrange laptops well over a year ago.

      Yes they look nice but they aren't as well built as they used to be (so far 2x2015 MBPs, one with a rattling GPU fan and broken USB port and the other with a thunderbolt port that just stopped working, 2012 MBA with a creaky chassis that needed the baseplate replaced) and they are far from being powerful enough now. I'm sure the fanboys will tell me it's my fault my Macbook didn't work or that it's my fault that I need more than 16GB of RAM or it's my fault that I need a more powerful GPU but with this release it does indeed show that Apple laptops are no longer for professional usage, they are underpowered and overpriced...but yes, at least they look nice.

    179. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by exomondo · · Score: 1

      And of course, your needs and wants are everyone's needs and wants, right?

      Why are you getting so immediately defensive when he didn't say or imply that at all? So quick to attempt to quash any negative opinion of Apple by pretending he was suggesting he was speaking for everybody. Come on, I like and use Apple products too but nobody responds like that without an agenda.

    180. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On planes I bring a mouse with me rather than use the Lenovo track pad. It's that bad.

      Why don't you just take your MacBook Pro?

      When I'm traveling on business I need my work laptop (the Lenovo) and I don't want to carry two laptops.

      Right because Apple don't make a good enough laptop, you can run Windows and Linux on them but in the end they are not even remotely comparable in terms of performance anymore. If you want a laptop that looks nice then sure, go for Apple but if you want one that performs well, sadly Apple don't make one anymore.

    181. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      and the guy two seats over had a Mac and I could hear his fan more than mine.
      Then he was not working but playing a game.
      (*facepalm*)

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    182. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Some of us like to run an OS that doesn't suck ass and doesn't require constant care and feeding like Linux or Windows.

      Yes and it's annoying that we're now stuck with crappy hardware. The GPUs are underperforming and we are limited to 16GB of RAM.

    183. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually they do by *limiting* the machines on which you can have OSX to the ones they sell, and because a bunch of Apple dipshits have been constantly advocating for OSX like it's the second coming of jesus or something.

      As it turns out many of the people who invested in OSX are getting burned because Apple is now releasing shitty, underpowered hardware as their "flagship". Understand that some of us like Apple and want OSX but aren't desperately seeking Apple's approval by uncontrollably gushing about everything they do. They've done a shit job on the hardware and that's not good enough.

      I don't expect this to change you, you're incapable of meaningfully criticising Apple.

    184. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lucm · · Score: 1

      and the guy two seats over had a Mac and I could hear his fan more than mine.
      Then he was not working but playing a game.
      (*facepalm*)

      A game on a Mac? Like what, Tetris? Farmville?

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    185. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Having a quiet machine matters if you're using it to record music for instance.

      And that's one of the biggest problems with Apple's "thinner" methodology, not only do we end up with underpowered hardware but the heat dissipation suffers too so doing nothing more than updating XCode starts thrashing the fans on my MBP, much less doing things like video or audio recording.

    186. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by lucm · · Score: 1

      I don't know how they do it because they don't spend tons on marketing to promote their "engineering" like Apple, but Thinkpads (and other business-class Lenovos) are very, very quiet.

      You mean they don't pay you well to claim that?

      Who? Apple or Lenovo? Please make your accusations and/or jokes more clear in the future.

      --
      lucm, indeed.
    187. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      Well, that seems pretty annoying. I will say though then when I run Logic to record audio, I don't experience any problems with fan noise, and updating Xcode doesn't seem to cause a problem either. But on the other hand, I don't have one of those super-thin ones, so maybe that's the reason?

    188. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've actually used MacBook Pro quite a bit, with it's touchpad. And you know what, I'll still take a TrackPoint on a ThinkPad any day of the week over a touchpad on a most mac-ish Mac out there. I happen to have the need to keep switching between typing and "mousing" all the time, and while with trackpoint I can keep my fingers in the middle row most of the time (combined with Dvorak layout), with touchpad I have to move my hand down, especially if I want to do things like scroll. And xy scrolling trackpoint is _very_ good at, especially on Linux where it doesn't require any third-party applications to be installed for that to work the way it should.

    189. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I have a trail of ThinkPads all the way from 2000, all of them still in perfectly working condition, though some have cracks in their body because I'm rather unceremonious with my hardware and had them dropped plenty times. They only time a ThinkPad died on me was when I somehow managed to spill a soup and a drop of it fell exactly onto IEEE1394 (FireWire) port and through it got onto motherboard and fried it. One of my ThinkPads got literally drowned, as in submerged into water, while turned on. The thing shut itself down immediately, but after I unplugged all power sources and partially disassembled it to dry it out it started up like nothing happened. I use it still to this day, it's W520 model, bought in 2011. Outperforms the MacBook Pro my company got me this spring too, BTW. And it's a touch typist's dream - I have no need to look at the keyboard to figure out where are my function keys and what are they supposed to do at the moment.

    190. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is multitouch?

      Standard on all modern laptops.

      Can I scroll any window using a two finger gesture even if that window doesn't currently have focus?

      That is a function of OS support, not hardware (assuming hardware supports multitouch). Two finger scroll is a standard function in all modern operating systems, scrolling in window that doesn't have keyboard focus is a standard feature in Linux desktop environments and can be achieved on Windows with something like Taekwindow (http://taekwindow.net/)

      Can I drag with three fingers?

      Again, OS function. In Windows that would be double tap without lifting finger after second tap and then drag. Not sure about Linux, but probably something similar.

      Show the desktop with four?

      Again, OS function. Typically on both Windows and Linux though done with keyboard shortcut instead of touchpad gestures.

      Right click with a (silent) two finger tap?

      (ugh, I'm tired of repeating) Again, OS function. But in modern systems easily supported out of the box on both Windows and Linux. Main left-button click, by the way, frequently supported out of the box as a singe finger tap without a click, something I have to explicitly enable on a Mac.

      No. Of course not. Because even if that trackpad did support multi-touch properly, Windows itself doesn't, and neither does Linux, making the support pointless.

      What kind of a blast from the past are you? Linux has been supporting this since at least early 2010s, Windows had support for that kind of stuff since at least Windows 7, if not Vista.

    191. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Trogre · · Score: 1

      To be fair, many other tech sites are joining in these days. Mostly on account of both Apple and Microsoft having gone totally batshit loco.

      Slashdot just did it before it was cool.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    192. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by tigersha · · Score: 1

      Easy.

      Linux does not run Photoshop
      Linux does not run Word
      Linux does not run Excel
      Linux does not run Illustrator
      Linux does not run InDesign
      Linux does not run Acrobat
      Linux does not run anything that comes close to Logic Pro/X
      Linux has a crap sound system, all the VSt's are Mac/Windows (in that order)
      Linux is a total PITA to configure
      Linux cannot even render a single character on a screen in such a way that I do not want to puke
      Linux's display subsystem is a joke on steroids. Color accuracy? What?
      No Linux laptop has the trackpad that a Mac has
      The Mac has a compliant PDF subsystem built into the OS. With all the standard Adobe fonts installed by default, not some bad substitutes.

      I use ALL of those programs on a day to day basis, and sometimes dabble with Final Cut/Motion and After Effects as well.

      As for Windows, the Mac has several things Windows does not:

      A functional Posix build system with gcc and all the Unix utilities
      Lots of Mac-only software for much lower prices than anything in Windows
      All the unix utilities you can imagine
      A decent working development environment which is pretty much the same a that on Linux

      And before the circle-jerk Command Line fanbois whine about me using GUIsa and how vi is so much better, I use my terminal and Sublime Text way more than any GUI. This completely rules out Windows.

      I work in a shop where I have to do a lot of publishing of Websites and PDF documents as part of a workflow. In an actual office with actual customers who use Word/Excel and such normal things. Linux is a no-go horror in such circumstances. On my Mac I can use ALL the normal Windows apps I like to use and I STILL HAVE A COMMAND LINE THAT CAN INTERACT WITH THEM.

      Get real. Only question I ask about a Laptop is easy: Does it run OS/X?

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    193. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Get real. Only question I ask about a Laptop is easy: Does it run OS/X?

      I've never heard of this "OS/X" - is that from IBM, a followup to OS/2?

    194. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      Well, last year I dropped a Thinkpad from my laptop bag which wasn't closed onto a hard tile floor and it bounced a couple times. No damage whatsoever. Who cares if it won't break, I don't want it to GET DAMAGED AT ALL. Win for the Thinkpad.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    195. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      because my 2010 Macbook was getting to the point where it was unusable
      Sorry, that is not only an idiotic comment it is impossible.
      Perhaps you should remove some movie files or hand it in at store to fix it?
      What should be wrong with an 2010 Mac is beyond me, it should run better than ever with new OS upgrades.
      You are likely a troll.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    196. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Every OSX update has made them slower (and uglier).
      Memory upgrade didn't help.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    197. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      That is incorrect.
      Most OS X updates lead to a faster Mac. Especially on old Macs.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    198. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      On planes I bring a mouse with me rather than use the Lenovo track pad. It's that bad.

      Why don't you just take your MacBook Pro?

      When I'm traveling on business I need my work laptop (the Lenovo) and I don't want to carry two laptops.

      Right because Apple don't make a good enough laptop, you can run Windows and Linux on them but in the end they are not even remotely comparable in terms of performance anymore. If you want a laptop that looks nice then sure, go for Apple but if you want one that performs well, sadly Apple don't make one anymore.

      That makes no sense whatsoever. (A) It's wrong. Apple and non Apple laptops use the same CPUs and memory chips. The performance is always in the same ballpark. (B) You are implying that performance is the reason to take a work laptop on a work trip when it is actually VPN and email access. (C) The axe you are grinding has nothing to do with my axe - take it to an grindstone that's relevant.

      --
      I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
    199. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by smash · · Score: 1

      i've used lenovos. no, they do not qualify. it's funny seeing responses such as yours from people who clearly haven't lived with a mac and actually experienced battery life and input devices that don't suck.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    200. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by smash · · Score: 1

      Yes it has always been a linux fanboy site. But it used to actually acknowledge technical excellence where applicable. Now it's changed hands, it's just basically "shit on anything not Linux" whether or not it's good or not. And attempt to spin any flaw in Linux as much as possible.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    201. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Updates, sure. Upgrades, no.

      I have an early 2008 MBP that I still get a lot of use out of. I upgraded from Snow Leopard to Mavericks to El Capitan, by which time it was annoyingly slow.

      Swapping the old HD for an SSD made it usable again, but I've only got 4GB RAM which is clearly not enough. I think it's only really faster because SSD swapping is faster than with the HD.

    202. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      Most likely not Warcraft or Starcraft, games like that don't use much computing power.

      Why my laptop can run 6 eVe online clients without hassle, but puts the vents on already when only one is running is beyond me :), I guess the vents not only react on temperature but also on CPU load.

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    203. Re:Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by golden_hands · · Score: 1

      My Dell Studio laptop purchased in 2009 was supported by Ubuntu out of the box. There were a few releases in between which introduced problems, but I would say 95% of all functionality( and 100% of everything important) has always been supported.

    204. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? by systemBuilder · · Score: 1

      All the extra portability is canceled out by the 12 dongles you have flopping around whenever you pick up the laptop to carry it to a meeting. END STORY.

  2. Linux fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nevertheless the System76 laptop mentioned looks like a turd compared to a MacBook Pro.
    Would REALLY love to have a system as nice as the MBP, but with Linux on it.

    1. Re:Linux fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would REALLY love to have a system as nice as the MBP, but with Linux on it.

      Just go to Finder and type terminal.

    2. Re:Linux fan here by slart42 · · Score: 2

      Yeah - being able to buy an equivalently or better specced machine then a MacBook Prop for less money has always been an option - that has not stopped people from buying MacBooks in the past, so I fail to see the news here. Now, I agree that the new MacBook Pros are a bit disappointing, and that there might be other laptops which compete very well. But the laptop mentioned in this slashvertisement fails to impress.

    3. Re:Linux fan here by ruir · · Score: 1

      I would love to buy to equivalent machine, not from HP, Lenovo. IBM, Dell and probably not from Samsung. The cherry on the cake would be not a non-Intel architecture.

    4. Re:Linux fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah it just sucks it requires a credit card to purchase from the app store now. /s

    5. Re: Linux fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha. You tried to be funny. But you just looking salty and broke.

    6. Re:Linux fan here by smash · · Score: 1

      If you spec up something close from HP and don't cheat on spec by picking things that are lower grade, it is similarly priced normally. That said, pricing on the new touch bar models is taking the piss.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    7. Re:Linux fan here by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

      Er what? You realize you can install Linux on a Mac just like you can install Windows on a Mac.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    8. Re:Linux fan here by ruir · · Score: 1

      I am interested in a non-Intel architecture, similar to the Lemote and preferably made on a BRICS country; as I said before HP, Compaq, IBM, Lenovo and Dell are out of the list.

  3. Apps, Apps and more Apps by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Linux is fine and all but it is *still* missing a number of high end professional level programs in a number of fields. Until that changes (and it hasn't in how many years now?), Linux on the Laptop will be a fairly niche product. If it meets your requirements that's great. You get lots of options including MacBooks in their limited incantations.

    But no Adobe, Autodesk, Maya etc.

    Life's a bitch. Then you vote.

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    1. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Linux is fine and all but it is *still* missing a number of high end professional level programs in a number of fields. Until that changes (and it hasn't in how many years now?), Linux on the Laptop will be a fairly niche product.

      It hardly matters because macOS is now starting to miss a lot of high end professional level programs as well. You're right that the new MacBooks aren't entirely likely to push people to Linux. But they are absolutely pushing people to Windows.

      Those Macs were pushed at people who use Macs for "creative" software. But since Apple killed Aperture and hobbled Final Cut Pro, most of the professional users were forced off Apple products and on to Adobe's Creative Cloud. Adobe's Creative Cloud runs just fine under Windows.

      The only other large group of people I know using MacBooks are developers who wanted a desktop Unix that IT would be willing to support. With the loss of the function keys and the abysmal max memory spec, the new MacBook Pros are worthless for that crowd. They might be pushed towards Linux, but with Microsoft starting to push Linux dev tools into Windows, the "IT supported" requirement probably means they'll hook back to Windows instead.

      Which leaves the new MacBook Pros as laptops for people who like shiny things but don't particularly care about functionality. It's funny to see Apple release new hardware that's already in the "Don't Buy" category, but the recommendation on these things is already to wait for the next revision in the hopes that the specs won't be terrible.

    2. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't happen overnight and without good reasons. If the Apple ecosystem starts collapsing, then more and more software houses will start porting their software to Linux. Think about games for examples. It was all flat. Then Valve starts the SteamOS projects et voila', we now have 1500+ games on Linux.

      The same could happen with professional software, if the developers really start feeling Apple is taking a bad route.

    3. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by mlts · · Score: 1

      That is the hope, but there is a good chance that they may just drop the offerings altogether and focus solely on consoles, with -maybe- some shoddy port for Windows.

    4. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Octorian · · Score: 1

      The only other large group of people I know using MacBooks are developers who wanted a desktop Unix that IT would be willing to support. With the loss of the function keys and the abysmal max memory spec, the new MacBook Pros are worthless for that crowd. They might be pushed towards Linux, but with Microsoft starting to push Linux dev tools into Windows, the "IT supported" requirement probably means they'll hook back to Windows instead.

      Its not just IT... Its also commercial software vendors who make things we all sometimes need to use, even if not as our primary tools.
      Regardless, I've often felt that this is a surprisingly large/significant market for Apple products that Apple themselves seems willfully ignorant of. I've even felt that the growth of this market was at the significant expense of desktop Linux. Heck, come out to Silicon Valley sometime and just look at how large a percentage of software developers are using Apple laptops.

    5. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by stasike · · Score: 2

      But no Adobe, Autodesk, Maya etc.

      I am using DraftSight as a replacement for Autocad on Linux. Free as a beer. It is very compatible opening drawings and other Autocad related files and has 95% of features in comparison with full AutoCAD.

    6. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Moof123 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A common problem is that being 99.9% compatible is not enough. As soon as a customer gets a drawing or document with messed up formatting the jig is up. If it is a MS Word 201X vs MS Word 201Y issue, management doesn't care. As soon as you mention open source, for "equivalent" or anything of the sort, you get shut down. For business it often is not worth the perceived headache to not be 100% the same as your customers or colleagues, even if the license fees look horrendous to a mere peon.

      We recently swapped all our machines from CentOS to Redhat because the vendor would not believe our bug submissions unless we used the officially supported OS. None of our bugs were OS related (we had been keeping one Redhat machine around for bug double checking, but it was becoming a hassle). According to our moles the vendor actually does all of their development on CentOS and then verifies against Redhat, but they will never admit it openly.

    7. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by smash · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It didn't happen through the 90s when Apple were completely adrift, and it won't happen now. The quality of the Linux desktop has not really changed since the late 90s, no matter how much various teams try to make it look like macOS. The same problems with audio, wifi, VPNs, wake from sleep, GPUs, and loading things reliably from network shares within applications still exist.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    8. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Dracos · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Big-ish (such as Adobe) and niche consumer software vendors have had no reason to support Linux and its paltry 2% usage share, and many reasons not to, including MS platform FUD and the legal understanding of FOSS licenses.

      Apple has a reputation for supporting professionals, but this new lineup all but wipes that out. The hardware is too underwhelming to maintain the hype. Apple has finally reached the point where their obsession with aesthetic design is compromising their products' capabilities. Apple has fully abandoned "form follows function" in favor of "function follows form", and in doing so have put themselves on a path to failure.

      System76 may have experienced a traffic spike, but unfortunately it won't last once all the disillusioned Apple users realize how spoiled they've been by OSX.

    9. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How much are you willing to pay to stay on Mac?

      Because that's the question people are now facing. With the base cost of the MacBook Pro being increased by $400, it's now $400 harder to convince management that you really need a Mac and can't do everything on the much cheaper, equivalently-specced, IT-approved, Windows laptop.

      It's too soon to know but I think it's safe to say that this new MacBook Pro will never make it onto management's "approved" laptop list simple due to cost.

      When you're looking at saving nearly $1000 by going to Windows, the question becomes "is Windows really $1000 worse than macOS?" And I think a lot of people are going to discover that the answer is no, it is not.

      IT already hates supporting macOS. Any further excuse to get rid of it is more than welcome.

    10. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only other large group of people I know using MacBooks are developers who wanted a desktop Unix that IT would be willing to support. With the loss of the function keys and the abysmal max memory spec, the new MacBook Pros are worthless for that crowd.

      I agree on the bad max memory spec - I'd like to see them provide a 32GB or 64GB BTO option; I spend a lot of time using tools like virtualbox, docker, vagrant, & packer - so more memory to be able to spin up larger / more VMs / containers would be really wonderful, and I'm hoping they'll expand that up to at least 32GB in the next refresh. Otherwise, I don't really care - the specs on my current system are fine for me, and will probably last me happily for another year or two... longer if I could get more RAM.

      However... the function keys? What the fuck? The number of times per day I use any function keys per day is in the low single digits, and the touchbar will allow you to still have function keys, just not mechanical keys to press. You haven't "lost" the function key functionality, it's just been converted into virtual keys on the touchbar. You may not like that change, but claiming that it's been "lost" is a little disingenuous.

    11. Re: Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we know your hope.

      Steam isn't going to stop existing, though, no matter how vigorously you click the heels of your ruby slippers together.

    12. Re: Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It depends on your definition of "Mac Users". If you mean simply people who presently use a Mac it's different than the small frenzied cult who wear the proper noun Mac User like a badge.

    13. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Holi · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not sure why you put Maya in there as they have had Linux compatibility since at least 2007.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    14. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Find support all the way back to 2001. Not sure about Maya 1.0 but linux support has been there since at least 2.0.

    15. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by mspohr · · Score: 1

      I think the reverse is true. Macbook is now a niche product for the few people who absolutely must have Adobe, Autodesk, Maya and can't use one of the FOSS alternatives.
      Everyone else will do fine with Linux on a PC or Chromebook.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    16. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Maya is available on Linux and has been for ages, as result of Linux being dominant (as in de facto standard) in the CG movie industry, Pixar, Dreamworks etc all run their animation+rendering pipelines on Linux (Renderman is of course on Linux as well), Dreamworks also do all their modeling on Linux (Mudbox was ported to Linux largely due to the request from Dreamworks).

    17. Re: Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Autodesk Maya is supported on Linux.

    18. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It didn't happen through the 90s when Apple were completely adrift, and it won't happen now. The quality of the Linux desktop has not really changed since the late 90s, no matter how much various teams try to make it look like macOS. The same problems with audio, wifi, VPNs, wake from sleep, GPUs, and loading things reliably from network shares within applications still exist.

      That's exactly what's going through my head. I'm looking at my options. My rMBP is still new enough I can blow this round off. I don't need to upgrade. But as Dracos said:

      Apple has finally reached the point where their obsession with aesthetic design is compromising their products' capabilities. Apple has fully abandoned "form follows function" in favor of "function follows form", and in doing so have put themselves on a path to failure.

      I think a lot of people are contemplating what's next? I left linux desktop for the Mac. Overall it's been a pretty good experience. I don't miss all the little glitches I used to get with linux. The Mac also never replaced linux nor windows. In a way if I could give it up I might feel like life is simpler. Back to two OSes instead of three. My linux skills are getting rusty. I've been doing the bare minimum. I try a distro from time to time and feel a bit 'meh'. What originally excited me enough to dive into linux was Enlightenment. Through my recent Mac years I've tried to avoid vender lockin with my data. I probably go migrate to linux again without a lot of pain.

      I suppose the thing that bugs me the most is seeing Apple apparently falter. They've made a lot of missteps on the Mac platform. They're driving away the pro users and trying to make it more like an iPad/iPhone. I suppose it remains to be seen if the market sees this as a wrong move or not. Time will tell.

    19. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by erapert · · Score: 1

      But no Adobe, Autodesk, Maya etc.

      1. Adobe is not a program or product. It's a brand. Are you saying that Photoshop doesn't run on Linux? Because there's alternatives y'know. Or you might be able to run PS CC 2015 under Wine.

      2. Autodesk also isn't a program or product. It's a brand. Are you saying that AutoCAD doesn't run on Linux? Because there's alternatives y'know.

      3. Maya does install and run natively on Linux

      Of course, when it comes to software, Linux supports literally everything except MS Visual Studio.

    20. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But no Adobe, Autodesk, Maya etc.

      There's definitely Maya on Linux. The VFX industry uses Maya on Linux heavily, along with loads of other creative tools: Mari, Modo, Katana, Nuke, etc..
      But yeah, no Photoshop, and Gimp doesn't really compare.

    21. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maya runs on linux.

    22. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But no Adobe, Autodesk, Maya etc./quote

      So onl 95% of people can use Linux instead of 100%?

    23. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by khz6955 · · Score: 1

      "Autodesk Education Community offers some products, such as Autodesk Maya, for the Linux operating system, starting with the 2016 releases." ref

      7 Apps That Prove You Don’t Need Adobe Creative Suite on Linux

    24. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      OK guys, WTF means "BTO"? New term to me, first I heard of it was after reading about the huge disappointment of the recent Mac refresh. I just googled it and got BTO Sports and a bunch of Japanese sites, so it's apparently some new TLA.

      Did something happen to the term "RAM" or is there some further clarification?

    25. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTO means Build To Order, versus "build to stock." Most computer vendors provide both options - you can buy models with default options from places like Best Buy or off Amazon.com (BTS models), or you can buy directly from the vendor and customize options, which gets you a BTO variant.

    26. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it won't last once all the disillusioned Apple users realize how spoiled they've been by OSX.

      ^This. I used OS X for a long time, and there are a lot of things to appreciate. I eventually made a full switch to a linux desktop was in the full knowledge i'd probably be abandoning those nice well thoughtout UX... I didn't switch because hardware differences, I honestly don't care much about the latest hardware anyway, I switched because that same OS became too bloated, annoying and buggy. If you are still in love with OS X, then you wont be coming to linux for hardware alone (or at least not for long as you say).

    27. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, there's no alternatives for professionals to Photoshop on Linux. There's no alternative to Photoshop. There's programs that aren't as good, don't do as much, and may be suitable for some tasks but saying that they're viable alternatives for professionals is just incorrect.

      This is why the Mac keeps winning - professional don't care about your dogma.

    28. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by Lotus456 · · Score: 1

      That's because professionals see computers as a tool, not a religion. The rule hasn't changed in 3 decades, you figure out which software you need to do the work, then buy the system that runs it.

      Apple has been pushing the religion hard lately (read brand loyalty) and no longer care about the choir of professionals who have been their loyal customers through thick and thin.

      --
      "It's a good computer... for I to BM on!" - apologies to Triumph, the insult comic dog
    29. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Cool, thanks. Had no idea what that term meant!

    30. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by sad_ · · Score: 1

      It's because you come from one platform and move to another you're missing certain apps.
      I went from DOS to Linux and when i bought a Mac many years ago i eventually installed Linux on it because i was missing all my apps i had in Linux. So, in my case, MacOS was missing apps, apps & apps.

      --
      On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
    31. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by tigersha · · Score: 1

      > then more and more software houses will start porting their software to Linux.

      No they won't

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    32. Re:Apps, Apps and more Apps by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 1

      using MacBooks are developers who wanted a desktop Unix that IT would be willing to support.
      There is no IT support necessary for MacBooks, or Macs.
      What exactly would an IT guy do on my Mac that I can not do myself and what exactly wÂmight break that I might need support? (*facepalm*)

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  4. That's excellent! by ScentCone · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'll just pop on over to System76, grab a machine, and install the Adobe suite that's necessary for doing business.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      GIMP and Blender are free, no need to waste money on Adobe crap.

    2. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless you actually need to get something done that looks professional and in a timely manner.

      Sorry but gimp and blender have some of the worst UIs ever created

    3. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'll just pop on over to System76, grab a machine, and install the Adobe suite that's necessary for doing business.

      Still easier than installing an ESC key on a next-generation Mac :)

    4. Re: That's excellent! by tepples · · Score: 4, Informative

      Does GIMP's UI remain poor even after turning on Windows > Single Window Mode? If so, what are your specific UI annoyances with GIMP and Blender?

    5. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Unless you actually need to get something done that looks professional and in a timely manner.

      Sorry but gimp and blender have some of the worst UIs ever created

      The UI in pretty much every Adobe product isn't any better. The learning curve for new users is atrociously steep.

    6. Re: That's excellent! by fluffernutter · · Score: 2

      Check out Krita in favor of Gimp. Also, Inkscape is very good for vector graphics, much better than illustrator.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    7. Re:That's excellent! by pr0t0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      GIMP and Blender are probably fine for some web graphics work, and maybe even some in-house print work. But they really do lack a lot of the nuanced or finer-grain tools necessary for commercial projects. They can also be problematic where files need to be worked on by different people in different companies at different points in the project. Since the fall of QuarkXPress, the industry standardized on Adobe for good or ill. You realistically cannot just decide to change tool sets without changing the industry.

      You can call Adobe crap if you want, and maybe you're right, but I've never had a project fail to go to press because of an issue with Creative Suite. I have seen projects fail to go to press because some freelancer decided to use something other than Adobe software and a graphic didn't show up on the DI because an EPS had some weird quirk in its code. If you're building a product that's used in the creative industry like a digital press, or platemaker, or anything else; you are building and testing with Adobe.

      --
      I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    8. Re:That's excellent! by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

      Show me a company anywhere using GIMP or Blender for production work.

      --
      Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    9. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't! It won't work on Linux!

    10. Re:That's excellent! by kanweg · · Score: 1

      You can see the regular function keys by pressing the Fn button. If you want to see them as default, visit the system preferences.

      Bert

    11. Re:That's excellent! by smash · · Score: 0

      Hahahahaha.... GIMP being compared to Adobe software. And how about video? Or audio?

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    12. Re:That's excellent! by smash · · Score: 1

      Bluetooth keyboard. doesn't even need physical connection. NEXT!

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    13. Re:That's excellent! by buchner.johannes · · Score: 2
      --
      NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
    14. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      GIMP and Blender already *are* used in professional work. Just because you don't like the UIs and don't know how to use the software properly doesn't make it unprofessional. It's a just different workflow than what you're used to.

    15. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blender is actually in wide use at film studios and gaming houses.

    16. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Might as well use MS paint.
      Gimp is fine for some simple edits, but Photoshop has a lot of nice features for getting specific stuff done quick.

    17. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'll just pop on over to System76, grab a machine, and install the Adobe suite that's necessary for doing business."

      If you find Adobe suite necessary for doing business, you're doing it wrong.

    18. Re:That's excellent! by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      If you find Adobe suite necessary for doing business, you're doing it wrong.

      If you don't understand why what you just said is hilariously foolish, then you really need to stop making a fool out of yourself, even as an anonymous coward.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    19. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More and more, though, it's Adobe on Windows. Adobe acknowledges that Wundows is their primary platform. If the market swings, a flavor of Linux could become the new secondary platform.

    20. Re: That's excellent! by ScentCone · · Score: 2

      And of course you have to be sure to pick projects from a small sub-set of the market where you're not expected to reliably exchange files or collaborate with anything like a cross section of working professionals. Just little stuff, like that.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    21. Re: That's excellent! by pr0t0 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...Inkscape is very good for vector graphics, much better than illustrator.

      Better, unless you are planning to take your work to a printing company. Inkscape does not appear support knockouts or overprints which means you would have to rely on auto-trapping software if the printer even has that. Inkscape was clearly not built for color separations. Better if don't need a gradient mesh.

      Because it's been years, I looked at the Inkscape web site. They still promote bezier curves as a bullet point. That's like an auto manufacturer touting a steering wheel. Simpler than Adobe Illustrator? Almost certainly. Better than Illustrator? Yeah...no.

      --
      I'm sorry, but your opinion seems to be wrong.
    22. Re:That's excellent! by ItsJustAPseudonym · · Score: 1

      Since the fall of QuarkXPress...

      I'm not in the graphics or website industry, so could you please elaborate? QuarkXPress seems to have an active release. What was "the fall"?

    23. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get plenty of work done without the Adobe suite.

      Hell, most days, I don't even open any of the Microsoft Office programs.

      But not a day goes by without at least 5 instances of Visual Studio open on my machine. And I dare you to find even a Mac that could do that (at least without installing an OS, because, let's face it, any x86 laptop is likely to be capable of running a full clean install of any major desktop OS).

    24. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different AC here. I use Photoshop 99% of the time on an almost daily basis. The only reason I keep GIMP around is for chuckles and because, for some reason, it will at least render corrupted SVG files that even Inkscape can't open. Inkscape by the way, unlike GIMP, isn't complete garbage.

      I could whip up 6 pages about how bad GIMP's UI is but let me just focus on the left side panel for now. It's a screen hogging pig for starters, which shows the people who designed GIMP have no fucking clue that serious users want the maximum available space devoted to.... get this... showing more of the image their working on! It can be resized, yes, but at its minimum width the tool area takes up 3 vertical rows. 3! They need to be grouped by type and collapsed into 1 row. Below that are the sliders. Jesus Christ, the sliders are HUGE! It's like this:

      ---------------
      |(big empty space)
      |(big empty space)
      | Opacity
      |(big empty space)
      |(big empty space)
      ---------------

      Oh, and on its minimum size, some of the toolbars and text, not that there should be any text at all, gets clipped and thus requires moving a slider at the very bottom of the window. Unbelievable! Blender is actually OK. It was a commercial program to start with, after all. It's not even remotely fair to compare the UIs between the two.

    25. Re: That's excellent! by tsqr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The UI in pretty much every Adobe product isn't any better. The learning curve for new users is atrociously steep.

      Interesting example of how words and phrases, through usage, can come to mean the opposite of their original meanings. From Wikipedia: "A learning curve is a graphical representation of the increase of learning (vertical axis) with experience (horizontal axis)." and "The familiar expression "a steep learning curve" is intended to mean that the activity is difficult to learn, although a learning curve with a steep start actually represents rapid progress."

    26. Re:That's excellent! by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      What option in system preferences makes Esc an actual key located in the correct spot with tactile feedback?

    27. Re: That's excellent! by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

      knockouts and overprints sounds like something obscure that there would be a workaround for. Inkscape has gradient mesh.

      --
      Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
    28. Re:That's excellent! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 2

      Oh please, GIMP is a toy.

      When will GIMP have native Layer Effects?

      * Gradient Overlay
      * Outer Glow

      When will it have native support for 16-bit and 32-bit raw importing?

      Because GIMP 2.8 is a joke compared to Photoshop.

      --
      Bose is shit and a bunch of cowards. Where are the technical specs??

    29. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your appeal to authority is as childish as it is wrong. As proven by buchner.johannes.

    30. Re:That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't use a thing, so therefore no one wants it.

      Got it!

    31. Re:That's excellent! by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      Unless, you know, you'd like to make any money by doing professional work. In which case, the cost of the Adobe suite is almost negligible.

    32. Re: That's excellent! by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      That's a good one. Read about them here. They not obscure when designing for print.

    33. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not built for color separations because it's not possible to do without tripping over patents, unfortunately.

    34. Re:That's excellent! by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      You could plug this in. You'll need a USB-C to USB adapter though, but you'll get tactile feedback.

    35. Re:That's excellent! by rho · · Score: 1

      Quark used to be the benchmark for page layout. Not many people really liked it, but everybody used it. Competitors came and went. Adobe's InDesign was the first to make a significant splash.

      Then Quark sat around on its ass while users were moving to OSX. It took far too long for them to properly support it. In the meantime, InDesign made significant in-roads in the market. It helped a lot that InDesign worked very well with Photoshop and Illustrator (natch). Quark has never been super-responsive to their customers, because there wasn't really a need. They owned the market so thoroughly for so many years.

      Quark survives today because there are a number of companies who went full in on a Quark workflow. They have custom and/or expensive XTensions that are used extensively as part of their core operations. Newspapers, for example: to do ad placement, dumping classifieds from whatever gimcrack system they use, etc. Quark has improved quite a bit recently, but they lost a lot of ground. They completely lost the battle at the education level. Graphic design classes teach Adobe products for the most part. Adobe has historically been a lot easier to work with with educational pricing than Quark.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    36. Re: That's excellent! by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Uh, why would anyone even consider that single window mode when not on a crap OS without virtual desktops? Its usability seems abysmal to me.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    37. Re:That's excellent! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      GIMP and Blender are free, no need to waste money on Adobe crap.

      And with both of them you get comparatively what you pay for.

    38. Re:That's excellent! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      What was "the fall"?

      Do you know Corel Draw has an active and very recent release too? That doesn't mean it's a household name or defacto industry standard. There was a time where if you weren't using QuarkXpress people would question why you were even in the industry, yet now there's a large part of the industry which doesn't seem to recall it existed.

      That is the fall.

      Did you know Mozilla has a current version of Firefox out? They have a laughable single digit marketshare. That is a fall too.

    39. Re: That's excellent! by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Blender isn't mainstream? Really? It's not my particular field but to my limited understanding I thought it was the king of the market for 3D stuff. Obviously I may not know what I'm talking about here, not my specialty, but I truly thought it was the de facto standard these days.

    40. Re:That's excellent! by ItsJustAPseudonym · · Score: 1
      Got it, thanks.

      Graphic design classes teach Adobe products for the most part. Adobe has historically been a lot easier to work with with educational pricing than Quark.

      I hear that drug dealers often offer the first hit for free. /s

    41. Re: That's excellent! by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      Just, stop, all right?. What you are saying is as ridiculous as sending someone needing a dev machine to buy a typewriter because, well, it has "letters and symbols and carriage returns" and when you ask to compile well "Sounds like an obscure thing" "there must be a workaround" yeah, no. Do you think the industry did not take a serious look into those options to avoid being milked by Adobe? I'm sorry to break your bubble, but the software is not up to the task, exception might be blender, perhaps, and that runs better in windows so yeah, same as 10 years ago, the pathetic DP software landscape on linux.

    42. Re: That's excellent! by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      Nothing as hypocritical, lame and half assed than a fuck-marketin^h^h^oogle-in-the-ass-neerd trying to sell me it's cute CAD and DP software. It never gets old.

    43. Re: That's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The learning difficulty curve..."

      FTFY

    44. Re: That's excellent! by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Well, I suppose I can calibrate the usefulness of your response by seeing if you understand how to use apostrophes. Nope, you don't know how. So I know I don't have to care what you think about the creative process, the industry, or the tools that actual, thinking people use every single day.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    45. Re:That's excellent! by tigersha · · Score: 1

      Can Gimp do Vector? No
      Can Gimp do Page layout? No
      Can Gimp do PDF workflows? No

      Can Blender do Vector? No
      Can Blender do Page layout? No
      Can Blender do PDF workflows? No

      Can Gimp open CMYK files properly? No

      You have no idea what you are talking about. We are talking PROFESSIONAL work here.

      Blender is pretty OK though. But in comparison to Photoshop Gimp is a joke.

      --
      The dangers of excessive individualism are nothing compared to the oppressiveness of excessive collectivism
    46. Re: That's excellent! by indi0144 · · Score: 1

      A shy grammar-nazi prop is all you got to reply to my point? It was not even meant to be a reply to you but the AC above (seems like you were the AC and you were sock-puppeting?), but replies to AC's are generally lost so, there you go. It is still lame and sad how some people think that their use cases where Linux work SHOULD apply to every industry in the world. It's been clear for almost a decade: Linux community does not give a fuck about anything related to the advertising industry, why should they? but then just don't pretend you care or imply that the industry don't know better for not using OSS software.

  5. Sign of things to come? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't wait to see the new dual-core mac mini with Intel non-Iris graphics, non-upgradable 4GB RAM and 4200 RPM HDD priced at US$995.

    1. Re:Sign of things to come? by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

      128 GB pci-e ssd min
      2 USB-C / TB 3.0 ports
      Hopefully a power port
      Hopefully e-net
      2 USB-A 3.1

      maybe an i7 one with

      4 usb-C / TB 3.0
      maybe dual pci-e ssd slots
      2-3 USB-A 3.1
      E-net
      maybe a ATI video card.
      max ram 16-32GB

      if we are very lucky a server

      dual pci-e ssd
      10-gig e-net or dual gig-e
      4 USB-C / TB 3.0
      up to 64GB ram
      2 USB-A 3.1

  6. I gave up before the launch by NixieBunny · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I recently switched from my aging MacBook Pro to a 17" HP Envy running Windows 7, because HP at least hasn't removed all the useful ports, and the older OS will run happily without a cloud. Oh, and it can run all that engineering software I need to do my work.

    --
    The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
    1. Re:I gave up before the launch by dbialac · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I figured out with Yosemite that Apple was moving in a direction I didn't want to follow anymore. I'm using a Surface Book these days and IMO it's the best computer I've ever used or owned.

    2. Re:I gave up before the launch by MountainLogic · · Score: 2

      "I figured out with Yosemite that Apple was moving in a direction I didn't want to follow anymore." In What way?

    3. Re:I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I gave up before the launch

      Then I reckon you scrubbed it.

    4. Re:I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Deeper in to his anus. The ass cramps are real.

    5. Re:I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I recently switched from my aging MacBook Pro to a 17" HP Envy running Windows 7, because HP at least hasn't removed all the useful ports, and the older OS will run happily without a cloud. Oh, and it can run all that engineering software I need to do my work.

      Sounds familiar. My 07 MBP finally started saying enough was enough (network didn't want to be reliable and USB was a thing of the past in it's opinion) and there was no way I was giving Apple new money for hardware that hadn't really changed in 4 years. Coupled with not liking their constant creep towards iOS with OS X and I was done. I picked up a Dell XPS 13 from their business line (so I could get the 16GB of RAM and quad core i7 with Linux pre-installed and supported).

      Looking at what Apple released last week, I'm not regretting my decision at all. No quad core option in the 13? No 32GB (or better) option in the 15? And the prices they want are just disgusting...

      As far as the subject of the article, I like the idea of the system76, but for the money I just wasn't impressed by the offering. That they look like the laptops I used to carry in the late 90s and early 00s didn't help their cause with me either.

    6. Re:I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      network didn't want to be reliable and USB was a thing of the past in it's opinion

      Looks like the keyboard's fucked too.

    7. Re:I gave up before the launch by dbialac · · Score: 2

      A few things, but it falls under nearly all of the new features didn't help me as I didn't have an iPhone nor did I want one. On top of that, the user interface overhaul left me unable to have desktop background featuring a photo because the icons lacked edges. Due to the way I perceive things, I had to consciously 'look' for icons because without edges, I just saw blobs of color blended in with everything else.

    8. Re: I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you talking about. Interface overhaul? What did you switch from os9 to osX yesterday? the osX interface hasn't changed since a long time. they've added onto it, But it still looks the same.

    9. Re:I gave up before the launch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oddly enough, it was the HP experience that made me move to Apple. After two of their premium laptops (ie, 2500 a pop) went up in flames within months of the end of warranty (one of which was on it's second system board, replaced a few months earlier) I was sick of it. Now I have an 4 year old rMBP that is still kicking the crap out of the newer Lonovos my company is getting in.

      Meh. I'm not real happy with the way Apple is going but if the build holds up as well as my still fantastic mid-2012 I'm sticking with them.

      Have a blast with HP's "support."

    10. Re:I gave up before the launch by iampiti · · Score: 1

      Since you seem not to like changes in OS X what do you think about Windows 10?
      It's derive towards a mobile like UI personally irks me to no end.

  7. Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a little more you get a very nice retina display on the mac as opposed to a 1080p blurfest.

    Not impressed with the new macbook pro, but still better than system76, sorry.

    1. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by bprotas · · Score: 1

      I agree - most of these comparisons miss the fact that the Retina display is sooo much better for the vast majority of things that most Linux users do with computers. Text-mode consoles and development are infinitely easier with high-dpi text; I've literally more than doubled the amount of time I can use a computer in a day without developing a headache by using higher-quality displays, and Linux support for these is a crapshoot at best. They aren't even available from system76, and if you find a vendor that does have them on Linux-compatible hardware, you're setting yourself up for dealing with difficult refresh rates, visual glitches, and apps that don't scale accurately.

      I agree that these new Macs are overpriced for what you get, but to compare with anything that doesn't have a 200+ dpi display is _not_ a fair comparison.

    2. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Raenex · · Score: 4, Informative

      these comparisons miss the fact that the Retina display is sooo much better for the vast majority of things that most Linux users do with computers. Text-mode consoles and development are infinitely easier with high-dpi text; I've literally more than doubled the amount of time I can use a computer in a day without developing a headache by using higher-quality displays

      I have zero problems with my 1080 display. The text looks fine and is not blurry. I do not get headaches and I'm on the computer pretty much all day. If I wanted to see an individual pixel, I'd have to get out a magnifying glass. And this is on a 23" desktop monitor, so the DPI has to be much lower compared to a 15" laptop at 1080.

      I suspect most people are drooling over resolution numbers and not actual performance. That's not to say that you aren't helped by it, but my guess is you're in the minority, because I really don't hear about getting headaches as a common complaint from computer users.

    3. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Pascoea · · Score: 1

      Not saying this to be crass, but do people actually utilize laptops (laptop screens) for development purposes? I've tried, it sucks. I mean it's fine in a pinch, but there is no way I'd use a 15" laptop screen for any extended period of time, I don't care how "pretty" it is. I currently carry a SP4. The high DPI display sure looks nice, but it still sucks to do any real work on without being hooked up to two 24" external monitors.

    4. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Ayanami_R · · Score: 1

      Me too. I bought my 13.3 laptop used, and it has a QHD screen, switched it to 1080p and it looks the same, even up close. No headaches either. Battery lasts much longer as well.

      --
      "Science is the power of man"
    5. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 2

      You can get a Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition with a 3200x1800 display (276 dpi), Intel HD graphics, and i7-7500U with 16 GB of DDR3 @ 1866MHz and a 512 GB PCIE SSD for $1800 and up. It ships with Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and most of the devices should be supported under *BSD as well.

    6. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by bprotas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Question: how old are you? :). I suspect there are more people with my issues than you give me credit for, although my point continues to be: the $2k for a system76 computer is not apples-to-apples to the $2400 MBP, and that the high-dpi screen, along with the software care that has gone into making it usable and functional across a wide variety of applications and actual "apparent" resolutions is quite valuable.

    7. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by smash · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Go use a retina display, on a mac (so it doesn't have brain damaged scaling) for a week. It will ruin you for 1080p.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    8. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are forgetting that in some areas the System 76 machine is BETTER speced then the mac. It has more ram, it has a better video card. These are things apple could have included but didnt.

    9. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by bprotas · · Score: 1

      Ummm...no, actually I didn't forget that.

    10. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not for development purposes here, but for similarly text-heavy document review and writing work we use them at my organization. We went to a single-device solution since most of our staff teleworks 2-4 days a week. The problem is, HP put the more useful display ports in the docking station, and stuck us with a VGA port and an HDMI port in the device. Since I don't own a VGA capable portrait monitor, when I work from home, I'm forced to use one portrait oriented monitor on the HDMI port, and then in the internal 1080p screen, which is obviously landscape orientation. It is tedious. Very tedious. I'll be trying to track down either a VGA capable monitor or a docking station when I can, because it is that annoying. The notebook screen is ergonomically poor even on a stand, has crappy viewing angles, is washed out, and has fat pixels. Now, I like fat pixels in a camera, but not in my screens. It isn't as bad as the 17" Dell I bought for a song a few years ago that was 1080p of "hey look at all those squares, but it still sucks. The other problem is the landscape orientation. When you do nothing but write and look at documents all day, everyday, you quickly realize landscape orientation not only is irritating, it actually wastes your time. I probably lose 20-30 minutes a day just shifting around the screen if I try to use the landscape monitor for anything other than dumping text into it directly from my brain. Of course, I'm used to seeing a whole page of text at a time, so I may be spoiled.

    11. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not saying this to be crass, but do people actually utilize laptops (laptop screens) for development purposes?

      Yes, lots of us, every day.

    12. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by armanox · · Score: 1

      I tried that, and then went back to my non-retina MBP (13") and couldn't tell the difference in quality. I did notice video performance increasing due to stepping down in screen resolution, but that's a different story.

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    13. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Alan+Shutko · · Score: 1

      Try using one for a while... People who have won't go back. HiDPI screens (call them Retina or whatever) basically take things so there aren't any pixels. The text is perfectly clear. Vectors are perfectly clear. When people don't have the right image assets, you notice they're blurrier than everything else.

      For text, it's a godsend. I can use vector fonts to get things just right instead of trying to find the right bitmap font (because on non-HiDPI screens, they get blurry with antialiasing). PragmataPro is simply gorgeous. That means I can use a slightly smaller size font and still have everything readable than I could otherwise, fitting more on screen. It means image editing is way better.

      I spent four months working on a non-HiDPI 27" display and was driven crazy. Now that I have a 4K 27" display, things are so much clearer.

    14. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      I use a high DPI display daily with my Sony Xperia Z4 tablet. And yes, the crispy sharp text is pretty cool. It doesn't really ruin normal displays for me, though so I won't get a 4k display for my PC any time soon.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    15. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [...] infinitely easier with high-dpi text; I've literally more than doubled the amount of time I can use a computer in a day without developing a headache by using higher-quality displays

      Turn off ClearType a.k.a. subpixel rendering a.k.a. colour-fringed text. (It's turned on by default almost everywhere.)

      The alternatives to subpixel rendering are greyscale antialiasing (good choice) and bilevel rendering (think bitmap fonts or Win95; not bad either).

      FreeType has an option for greyscale antialiasing, and so does OS X too. Windows has one too but it has abysmal results so I wouldn't recommend it.

    16. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Raenex · · Score: 1

      I spent four months working on a non-HiDPI 27" display and was driven crazy. Now that I have a 4K 27" display, things are so much clearer.

      Notice how I was talking about my desktop 23" display vs a 15" laptop, and you are using a 27" display. The bigger the display, the more resolution matters. So for me, 1080 is fine at 23". At 27" I might feel differently. At 15", I have a hard time feeling like this is going to be some kind of game changer when I'm not having problems at 23".

    17. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by strikethree · · Score: 1

      I have zero problems with my 1080 display. The text looks fine and is not blurry.

      Be honest with yourself when doing this: Place a 4k monitor and a 1080p monitor side by side with lots of text showing.

      Your 1080p monitor is far superior to the 13 inch television (CRT, not LCD) that I had to use a monitor way back when, but if asked, I would have said that the 13 television works... just as you are saying your 1080p monitor works.

      A friend came over to my place one day semi-recently. He walked in my door and could see my monitor from the doorway, about 8 meters away. Immediately he exclaimed that my monitor was very different than his. I explained it was a 4k monitor and he immediately went out and bought one.

      Could he see the pixels from 25 feet away? Definitely not. Could he still tell the difference between 4k and 1080p from 25 feet away? Certainly.

      Honestly, 4k is supremely better but in an overall sense, it is only one more step on the way to photorealism. My 4k monitor is still less than 300 DPI... and 600 DPI is closer to the ultimate goal.

      Give up your absurd 1080p monitor, get a 4k monitor, and hope that they get to 600 DPI before you die. The lack of DPI may not consciously affect you, and it certainly does not consciously affect many others; however, the lack of clarity is absurdly evident once you examine the folks who get headaches and fatigue from trying to do edge detection on low-DPI monitors. (edge detection is how we identify letters and objects in our brains)

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    18. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Be honest with yourself when doing this: Place a 4k monitor and a 1080p monitor side by side with lots of text showing.

      I don't have a 4k monitor lying around, so this isn't going to happen. I've seen them in the stores and have not been gobsmacked.

      Your 1080p monitor is far superior to the 13 inch television (CRT, not LCD) that I had to use a monitor way back when, but if asked, I would have said that the 13 television works... just as you are saying your 1080p monitor works.

      Aliasing was very obvious in the older monitors, as was some screen blurring. They "worked", but I looked forward to bigger monitors with higher resolution.

      Give up your absurd 1080p monitor, get a 4k monitor

      I'll get one when this monitor dies, which could be several years. Who knows, maybe it'll be 8k by then.

    19. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by smash · · Score: 1

      I would suggest that you get your eyes tested. Text is much, much sharper and easier to read.

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    20. Re: Too Bad the Screen is Crap by Blaskowicz · · Score: 1

      Eh, someone should make a laptop with a portrait screen, perhaps an OLED HiDPI one. Problem solved.

  8. No 5k Dispy, No 80 Gb I/O, No TouchBar, No macOS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lame.

    CAPTCHA: Militant

  9. Much better specs.... except for the display. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm considering moving back to Linux from MBP. But once you've used a hidpi display it's hard to consider going back. System76 has nothing hidpi, and there's relatively few good choices from Dell and Lenovo.

    Also judging from what it does to prices at those other vendors, the very-nice-display is a pretty large share of the cost.

    1. Re:Much better specs.... except for the display. by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      Alienware offers some pretty fricken high dpi displays- I think their 3840x2160 is higher resolution than a Macbook Pro offers. I have no clue if those machines work acceptably well with Linux, however.

  10. Great comparison - system specs only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's just exhausting to read stuff like this.

    Let's just take this right to the opposite end of the spectrum and compare the new macbook to a nicely finished brick of aluminum, then talk about how I can get this brick of aluminum for a fraction of the price. But let's not talk about system components... we're trying to compare bricks of aluminum here for god sakes

  11. Touch ID power button by backslashdot · · Score: 1, Funny

    Who is the genius at Apple that thought of making the Power Button and Touch ID the same? It's comedic. Give that guy his own show on Comedy Central. How many people will inadvertently shut off their Mac?

    They will need a software fix. But can they make it work properly when stuff is frozen?

    1. Re:Touch ID power button by Feral+Nerd · · Score: 1

      Who is the genius at Apple that thought of making the Power Button and Touch ID the same? It's comedic. Give that guy his own show on Comedy Central. How many people will inadvertently shut off their Mac?

      They will need a software fix. But can they make it work properly when stuff is frozen?

      You get a nag screen if you push the off button on a Mac much like you get in Windows and most Linuxes today. I'd be pretty surprised if inadvertently shutting the thing down via Touch ID would cause it to shut down without warning and nix all your work.

    2. Re:Touch ID power button by 31415926535897 · · Score: 1

      When you push the power button now it doesn't turn the laptop off. You need to hold it down to take effect. So I assume it will work the same and it will be difficult to accidentally turn off your computer.

    3. Re:Touch ID power button by Black.Shuck · · Score: 1

      They need a software fix for a button nobody outside of Apple (and a few tech media) has pressed?

    4. Re:Touch ID power button by backslashdot · · Score: 1

      That's not true of current Macs. I just tried it on couple of Mac Pros. They just shut off. The only "warning" is the within 2 seconds the screen blanks and then you have to log back in -- but if it's Touch ID enabled it may log you back in instantly. If you keep holding it, it will shut off.

    5. Re:Touch ID power button by backslashdot · · Score: 1

      Yes that's true. BUT .. sometimes touch ID may not work properly and you may end up holding it going "WTF, work dammit!". i just tried it (without Touch ID obviously) and it shuts off in 5 seconds .. the screen blanks in under 2 seconds -- but with touch ID you auto login so the screen blank may not even be noticeable. I am sure the new Mac Pros wont work like that .. but I guess we'll have to see.

    6. Re: Touch ID power button by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These aren't Mac pros, they are MacBook pros. When I press the power button on my MBP a dialog pops up asking me what I want to do. Sleep? Shutdown, etc.

    7. Re:Touch ID power button by Wraithlyn · · Score: 1

      The Home button doubles as a touch sensor on iPhones. I can't recall ever pressing Home by accident when I was just trying to use Touch ID.

      Pressing down, and "lightly resting your finger" are very different actions.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    8. Re:Touch ID power button by scdeimos · · Score: 1

      With iOS 9 Apple shortened the Home button timings for Siri. I'm regularly annoyed by Siri popping up when I'm just trying to unlock my iPhone with Touch ID, so I expect your complaint about Macbook Pro's combined power/Touch ID button will in fact catch a number of people out.

  12. Tired old comment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This aint fucking news! Apple has always been more expensive, and their hardware has never been up to snuff for.
    What you buy when you buy Apple is a membership into its cult.

  13. Is it a supported platform for OSX? by BaronM · · Score: 0

    If not, then it's not an MBP competitor.

    It may be a cheaper, have better specs, be better designed, be better built, have a longer warranty, or even all of the above, but if it doesn't run OSX, it's not a replacement for an MBP.

    Of course, if OSX isn't important to you for whatever reason, why would you buy a Mac? That is their only real differentiator, and has been since high DPI ultrabooks began shipping from quality manufacturers. I do include 'need OSX-only applications', 'don't like Windows high DPI handling', and 'need proper color calibration across HW and SW' as 'OSX is important to you'.

    Basically, a System76 running Linux is only competitor for an MBP for the very small segment of the market that want's a nice UNIX-like preinstalled on laptop hardware designed to support it and doesn't want a Dell developer edition.

  14. My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

    When Apple stopped making their 17" laptops I jumped to Dell.

    My current machine is a M6700 with a 3940XM, 32GB of RAM, 4 hard drives, 2 wifi cards, IEEE1394, 5x USB, eSata, Display Port, VGA, and HDMI. I've tested it with Windows, Linux and BSD and all work just fine.

    Then again it's the antithesis of what most Apple laptops are, the battery life sucks but it's a mobile workstation and I need that.

    With all those specs, new, it cost ~$5k.

    1. Re:My MBP Replacement by 110010001000 · · Score: 2

      Yes, you definitely need a laptop with 4 hard drives and 2 wifi cards.

    2. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Because you know my usage cycle best?

      With ZFS that gives me a mirrored 1TB pool for redundancy working anywhere. 2 SSD drives are 2 OS drives or an OS drive and scratch SSD drive.

      2 Wifi cards allows you to connect to separate networks or turn one into an access point. (For those hotels that only allow 1 device on their network at a time.)

    3. Re:My MBP Replacement by Feral+Nerd · · Score: 0, Troll

      Because you know my usage cycle best?

      With ZFS that gives me a mirrored 1TB pool for redundancy working anywhere. 2 SSD drives are 2 OS drives or an OS drive and scratch SSD drive.

      2 Wifi cards allows you to connect to separate networks or turn one into an access point. (For those hotels that only allow 1 device on their network at a time.)

      So what? You have a an unusual usage cycle for which you buy an unusual laptop. Then you come here to bitch and moan about bog-standard consumer laptops being a bad fit for you and how Apple is a crap company because they don't make a model with 32GB of RAM, 4 hard drives, 2 wifi cards, IEEE1394, 5x USB, eSata, Display Port, VGA, and HDMI for you and the 0.1% of the laptop using public that actually needs a machine like that.

    4. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Then you come here to bitch and moan about bog-standard consumer laptops being a bad fit for you and how Apple is a crap company

      [Citation Needed].

      I pointed out it was exactly the type of machine Apple didn't make but that I was one of the people that needed it. Please point out my 'bitching and moaning' or specifically where I said apple was a "crap company".

    5. Re:My MBP Replacement by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      I know, what was apple thinking when they didn't consider people who need 1TB ZFS pools? By the way: you don't need any "network cards" to turn a laptop into an access point, let alone 2. This isn't 1996.

    6. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Additionally I pointed out how much it cost. Pointing to the fact that high spec laptops end up actually costing money. Showing off the latest $500 laptop and comparing it to a laptop that a company spent money to engineer (Be it a Dell or an Apple) is a worthless comparison.

    7. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      you don't need any "network cards" to turn a laptop into an access point, let alone 2. This isn't 1996.

      When did I say "network cards"? I'm curious as to why you put into quotes something that isn't a quote. ""network cards"" first appears in this thread of comments in your post.

      Additionally I would be very, very interested as to how you are turning any machine into an access point without a Wifi card of some sort.

    8. Re:My MBP Replacement by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

      What year is this? No one has "wifi cards" in 2016. Are you using PCMCIA too? The point is that NO ONE needs a laptop with 4 hard drives and two wifi cards. Not even you.

    9. Re:My MBP Replacement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh yes, continue to tell everyone else why they are wrong. Your almost as annoying as amimojo.

    10. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      "wifi cards"

      Oh for fuck sake. Really? That's the vernacular you're getting panties in a twist about? Everyone I know (yourself aside) still calls them cards. An Amazon they're still sold as 'cards'.

      https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=n...

      The point is that NO ONE needs a laptop with 4 hard drives

      I'm curious as to what your solution to my use case problem is? 3 external hard drives? Carrying around a battery powered SAN array?

      Just because you don't need or can't fathom how people can need more hard drives doesn't mean some people don't.

      Not even you.

      Tell me more about my use cases that you seem to know so much about. While you're at it why not build me what you think is the most perfect unicorn laptop.

      Thank god I didn't mention using the Nvidia GPU for mobile CUDA development, I'm sure you'd have an opinion on how I didn't need that either.

    11. Re:My MBP Replacement by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      s/An Amazon/On Amazon.

    12. Re:My MBP Replacement by slew · · Score: 1

      2 Wifi cards allows you to connect to separate networks or turn one into an access point. (For those hotels that only allow 1 device on their network at a time.)

      Or maybe you could simply enable SoftAP (aka Virtual Wifi) on your laptop?

    13. Re:My MBP Replacement by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Wow, an entire thread featuring an argument between 0100010001010011 (652467) and 110010001000 (697113). I guess it was bound to happen eventually.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  15. Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Chrisq · · Score: 4, Informative

    Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux

    I would think that some will actually be very few. I'm a Linux fan, but I think it will only attract the very few technically aware MacBook users. Though getting better, Linux is does not match the "everything works" Apple philosophy, i.e. you buy a graphics tablet or whatever, plug it in and all your apps will work with it straight off.

    1. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      That was my thought too... They're on opposite ends of the spectrum.

      You have Expensive, lots of hand-holding with Apple to Free (OS) and comparatively cheap hardware with no handholding with Linux. Microsoft windows sits between Apple and Linux on the spectrum. Or is, owning Apple a prescription to hating MS so willing to skip over them completely.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    2. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Desler · · Score: 1

      Exactly this just reeks of someone making spurious conclusions to start a PR campaign. How exactly did System76 verify that all this traffic was from "Apple loyalists"? Did these supposed "loyalists" have to submit proof of identity and take a test?

    3. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by ausekilis · · Score: 1

      I have a System76 laptop that's now 4 years old. Last I checked they still provide their own PPA for assorted drivers and things that came pre-configured, but wouldn't necessarily work on a newly-downloaded Ubuntu ISO. For those times that I was actually using Ubuntu, a majority of the things did "just work". Mine is actually a Clevo rebrand whose only difference with linux "commodity" hardware was the brightness control function key bindings not quite working in a typical Fedora install. Otherwise all keys and hardware worked just fine.

      That obviously won't be the case for every laptop from every vendor, but System76 does have good support and seems to want to ease the pain of transitioning to Linux.

    4. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Apple "everything works" is a myth. With Apple it's "everything works if you do it our way".

    5. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like someone who has never tried to use hardware made by a company no longer in business. Plugging in OLD hardware into a newly configured Linux system usually does "just work". Try that with Win10 or macOS Fignewton or whatever they call the damn thing now.

    6. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Everything works... if everything has the latest updates... and you never did anything previously unsupported... and you're not trying to extend functionality beyond what Apple originally envisioned... and you're a paying customer and you call Apple support. Oh, and you're definitely not using iCloud.

    7. Re:Pushes Some Apple Loyalists To Ubuntu Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My experience with an iPad is "nothing works". Wife has one and it is always pissing me off. It is an aggravating POS.

  16. Not me by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 5, Informative

    So I've been a Linux user since 1994, and it's been my primary development environment, and provided me a job, for 20+ years now, and for that I'm very thankful. I love developing on Linux.

    That being said, I owned a succession of Linux laptops that never worked entirely correctly before I got my retina macbook pro in 2012. I'd say 25% of system updates to my Linux distro would break something, maybe a wireless driver would get flaky, maybe X11 would crap out in some new or unusual way, maybe the battery life would be bad because some kind of battery optimization would stop working. There were ALWAYS problems, it was like living with a finicky collector's automobile that you're spending as much time tinkering with to keep it running as you are actually driving it. A major source of problems with Linux was always sleep and hibernate modes, which were clunky to engage, slow to suspend and resume, and, if they worked, almost always had caveats (I don't know how many scripts I wrote that would switch to a virtual console away from X before suspend and then back again after resume, because X would so often just die if you suspended while it controlled the display).

    Maybe things have improved, but I doubt it. On the other hand, this 2012 macbook pro has been a complete pleasure to use. EVERYTHING works correctly, I have never had a single problem of any kind with it. Tons of little details all work seamlessly together. I can close the lid and the thing sleeps, open it, and it wakes up. Never had a graphics problem or a driver problem of any kind.

    Of course I know this is because the deck is stacked in favor of Apple, who own the entire stack from hardware through operating system and up through most software. But I don't care. Because it just works, and works so well.

    That being said, I am very disappointed with the newest iteration of the macbook pro and I don't think I'll be buying one despite having assumed that I would, leading up to the actual announcement. I will just chug along with this 2012 rMBP. I will NOT switch back to Linux. I'll take a correctly functioning slower and older laptop over a fast and new machine filled with quirks and bugs.

    1. Re:Not me by ErikTheRed · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This. I had the exact same experience with Linux, and made the exact same switch when the Retina MacBook Pros were first released. I still use Linux whenever possible on servers, but I don't have time to screw around with my desktop and laptop machines. I need them to just work, which Apple mostly accomplishes (aside from a few relatively minor and very occasional issues).

      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
    2. Re:Not me by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Things seem to be a bit better now; I had some problems with my last laptop and Ubuntu last year, mostly around hibernation. But a Dell Precision I purchased last week seems to work great with Xubuntu right out of the box -- everything just worked, from the very first boot-up. It's a beautiful machine, too.

      That still doesn't buy you a lot if you need stuff that runs specifically on OSX, although I think that most commercial stuff should at least have a windows port. I might end up feeling differently about Adobe et al whenever I have to start editing 4K 360 degree videos and previewing them on VR headsets.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    3. Re:Not me by ruir · · Score: 1

      Exactly , I second you too guys . I have to fix up all the linuxes in my server farm, and at my work laptop where I do not need every ounce of performance, MacBook does the job without giving too much headaches.

    4. Re:Not me by evileeyore · · Score: 1

      Same exact boat here. I was super excited to get a new Pro with the updated Skylake processor and 32 gigs of ram... then i saw touchbar... Closed window, guess i am waiting 4 more years.

    5. Re:Not me by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      Let me preface this by saying that my reply is not contrarian in any way. In fact, I actually very much agree with you.

      I'd say 25% of system updates to my Linux distro would break something, maybe a wireless driver would get flaky, maybe X11 would crap out in some new or unusual way, maybe the battery life would be bad because some kind of battery optimization would stop working. There were ALWAYS problems,

      I noticed these problems. What you may not be realizing is, that we entered an era in which software updates rarely bring a true improvement. This is true for practically all software in existence, including operating systems, large scale software suites, small Android apps, web-based apps etc. Even computers (I'll get back to this in a moment).
      But we also entered an era, I think, where updating is not as super-duper-ultra-extra-fuckindiddlydo-mandatory as it used to be! It started around Windows 8 - people started realizing that, staying with Windows 7, had no drawbacks. And MS reacted to this by ramming Windows 10 down everybody's throat as hard as they could. I sure as hell am not going to let MS force me into Windows 10, for a suite of disparate reasons. So what I do now is, I have a bunch of ThinkPad T400 series laptops, all of them with Windows 7. These laptops have all rock-solid hardware in terms of reliability, and they do what I need, which even includes light-to-medium SolidWorks design.
      So in a way we are, at the moment, kindred spirits: as you hold on to your 2012 MB Pro, I hold on to my ThinkPads. Still the best keyboard around, with the least intrusive OS that supports the apps I need. I'm not updating the OS, either, because the current updates from MS have a very dubious value. As far as I can tell, I'm set for the next 5-10 years.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    6. Re:Not me by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      I had a hell of a time installing Linux Mint on an HP Envy M6 and I posted about it in their forums (which was 100% ignored): https://forums.linuxmint.com/v...

      The tl;dr of it is this, to get it installed I had to:

      • - Find custom network drivers because the ones that came with it (RT3290) did not work at all. This involved getting source code and re-compiling because the deb package failed on line 1 with an error... why, why would should that ever be necessary for a professional desktop OS (not a hobbiest machine)?
      • - The EFI installation for the bootloader would continually go in the wrong directory, so it never worked. It took me several hours to realize this was the issue and manually fix it
      • - Suspending has never worked when the lid closed. When it comes 'back' it would just have an error and X would be dead
      • - Battery life was awful until I followed a well known "guide" to fix it... again, why?
      • - After a few weeks a new Linux Mint version came out and there was no upgrade path. The only option is to format and re-install. At this point I just gave up because that's unacceptable. Every new version of Windows (7-10 even), and Mac OSX (10.4-10.8 as an example) do not require a format and will just upgrade. Why can't Linux?

      I love "playing" with Linux, but until it works on a desktop like MacOS and Windows without requiring screwing around, re-compiling, and format / re-install for major version upgrades, nobody who doesn't have time for a Linux-hobby can use it.

    7. Re:Not me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm. Think about this. Linux tries to support ALL laptops with little help from vendors and hardware makers. Apple only has to support models that they designed. Easy for Apple to do.

    8. Re:Not me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear you on this one. I grew up a windows user, and used it until XP. Then I got into linux, my go-to being Ubuntu, but also Fedora and Suse. I used that since ~2006 for everything possible including web dev work, until work bought me a 2015 MBP early this year. It's been rock solid. ROCK SOLID. I've never owned a computer I had to mess with less, and that includes OEM windows installs on laptops. Interestingly though, I generally have more luck with a Dell laptop running Ubuntu than the same one running the stock windows OEM install. In my experience, MacOS > Linux > Windows for desktop use. I usually had/have very few issues with Ubuntu though, and it was generally really stable for me. I often miss Ubuntu for some reason when using my MBP. I don't know why, but I do. I can't put my finger on it. Sometimes I just feel like I do "better work" when I'm using Linux as opposed to MacOS, even though that seems impossible considering there's nothing "hard" about using my mac.

    9. Re:Not me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Upgrade paths depend on the distro, indeed Mint doesn't support such upgrades (also I heard bad things about Mint security policy).
      But at least Debian/Ubuntu/Arch support such upgrades.
      What also prevents problems, is simply buying hardware that works fine with Linux. Instead of trying it on some random machine not (initially) purchased for that purpose.
      But yes you're right, Linux still needs more manual labor and knowledge. It forces you more to learn how it works, which may not interest you.
      For me however, after having used Linux for 20 years, I know my way around the OS and can fix/tweak things to an acceptable degree. While Windows for me has always been a black box that does things I don't want, which sometimes can only be fixed by installing/buying yet another bloated black box with a fancy name from a 3rd party, or an unintuitive variable somewhere deep in the registry, or not at all.

    10. Re:Not me by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1

      This is the same reason I switched from Linux back to Windows after spending a couple years in Linux land during the whole Vista fiasco.

      Linux (Ubuntu specifically) was great at first, aside from some pain getting my laptop's wireless driver to work. It was a lot of fun playing with some of the neat little features Windows doesn't have too. But it seems like the more you do with it the more likely you are to hit some fussy component that you need a CS degree to fix.

      Windows has plenty of problems, and especially back in the Vista days things didn't "just work" as much as the Linux box did. But at the same time, in Windows it's extremely unlikely that something like installing a new media player is going to completely break your computer's audio playback. And 9 times out of 10, if it DID do something weird like that, uninstalling the bad software would fix the problem.

      Not so with Linux. Some config file somewhere has been changed and the uninstall script (when there even is one) doesn't have enough information to safely un-fuck what it fucked up. That was the one that finally sent me, grudgingly, back to Windows after two years of dealing with weird problems that would pop up.

      --
      Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
    11. Re:Not me by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, Windows 10 is an abomination. It forces me to reboot on its schedule when it has updates to perform (it's literally told me "I'm going to reboot your computer in 1 hour to install updates), and I've missed/not noticed dialogs and had the thing just reboot itself on my while I was in the middle of work, which was lost. It also spends a significant part of my network bandwidth continuously loading updates.

      I'd say every three or four reboots, it goes into a lengthy update process that takes minutes.

      An operating system that forcefully reboots itself, without user control, and that takes minutes to boot up a significant percentage of the time, is in my opinion, fundamentally broken. I loathe Windows 10. I only use it because it's required on my VR PC at the moment, and probably always will be, because let's face it, Apple doesn't do a good job keeping up with high end graphics hardware (at a reasonable price), and Linux is completely hopeless when it comes to being an OS for the masses.

    12. Re:Not me by Bryan+Ischo · · Score: 2

      I can fix everything that comes my way in Linux with enough time and effort. I can go all the way down to modifying kernel source and recompiling if necessary.

      The thing is, I don't want to spend my time doing that. There was a time in the 90's when that was fun because it was a liberating feeling of having a level of control not afforded by other operating systems. But pretty quickly, it became a chore, when I had to keep fixing the same sorts of problems over and over again.

      I agree that not being able to fix low level problems is a drawback of Windows and Mac OS X; however; major problems occur (on Mac OS X at least, Windows definitely is still quite a bit flakier) so rarely that the tradeoff is very, very worth it ... for me.

    13. Re:Not me by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      What also prevents problems, is simply buying hardware that works fine with Linux. Instead of trying it on some random machine not (initially) purchased for that purpose.

      I'm pretty sick and tired of hearing this counter-argument to my "problems." The majority of hardware I've ever bought has worked "out of the box" with Windows and Mac, I'm talking older scanners, brand new graphics cards, keyboards, mice, etc. The few that didn't immediately, were either solved in Windows by "automatic driver download", or by going to the vendor's website or using the provided disc (last ditch resort). I've never actually come across hardware that:

      a. didn't work, or
      b. required me to screw around with source code, and re-compile a kernel

      And, you appear to be speaking to me as if I don't know how to use Linux. I do, I've been programming for the last 20 years and working with all 3 platforms (Mac, Windows, Linux). I respect Linux, but at some point the community, including Slashdot, has to admit that my experience is fairly common (even if you anecdotally haven't had it) and you can't expect 'regular' people to want to deal with this. I'm in the tech field and even I don't want to deal with this! Why? I have a family, my time is valuable, and while I can screw around for ours with my OS, I don't want to. Make it "work" without having to screw around, or at least admit there's a problem, and then we can start to get somewhere.

    14. Re:Not me by iONiUM · · Score: 1

      This.

    15. Re:Not me by the_B0fh · · Score: 1

      You may find this article interesting then:

      http://appleinsider.com/articl...

    16. Re:Not me by kruhft · · Score: 1

      It's getting so bad I've switched to Solaris for my main machine, and 11.1 at that which is over 10 years old. Still the same UNIX software, an antique browser that hobbles along (but Gail works in HTML mode) but...it's solid and fast and works and has all the Solaris niceness of dtrace, ZFS and whatever else is hidden in there under the hood that hasn't changed in years and from a developer that strives to keep the platform stable for developers.

      Linux has completely jumped the shark for my day to day usage. Screen blanking and never coming back, processes randomly hanging and crashing the system to not booting at all. It's been an exercise in complete frustration lately, unlike the 20 years of regular frustration knowing that what i was using *was* better than the alternatives.

      So, yeah, screw it. I'm going corporate.

    17. Re:Not me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I literally said you're right, that Linux demands more work and knowledge, and that people might not feel it worth their time/energy.
      I didn't say your problems with Linux/Mint would be solved by "better" hardware, or that you lack skills, or that you should choose Linux instead.
      Just wanted to mention some ideas to make it easier for anyone interested in trying Linux, you don't have to take it as a counter-argument to your personal preferences. By all means use Windows/OSX if it works better for you.
      And yes, buying hardware designed for Windows, indeed generally works fine in Windows, so that is an advantage. For Linux you have to do some more "background checks" or you might run into some troubles like you did with your NIC. And yes, I understand, you personally don't want to do that and that's fine.

    18. Re:Not me by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      I have the same MBP as you. My upgrade to a 1 TB SSD is probably the only difference.

      I agree with you completely on the deficits of the new MBP.

      No Micro-SD slot? WTF?
      No Mag-Safe charging connector?
      Not even one USB port?
      Why waste a USB-C port on the data-less task of charging the battery? Sure, I can buy adapters and dongles, but fuck that noise.

      I won't be moving to this most-recent MBP. Ever. Same with he iPhone 7. Why Apple is removing tried-and-true ports for a single-port interface – all at once – is baffling. In 5-8 years, sure, it will make sense. But this sudden change removing functionality and ports is just way too much, all at once.

    19. Re:Not me by armanox · · Score: 1

      I remember a time when updating on Linux could cause drivers to become unstable (especially WiFi), but that was about ten years ago, and the last time I remember seeing that was about the time that Fedora 14 came out (and that was when X11 stopped supporting DRI1 base GPUs - sure, they worked again, but DRI was disabled and you had to software render everything - I'm talking like the Intel i815, nVidia GeForce 3, ATI Rage, and NeoMagic AGP 256 being my sample set - different vendors/drivers but they were all dropped at the same time). Since that period and into recent days I have not had issues with Linux not working with my hardware (still have an occasional issue with waiting for nVidia or AMD to release an updated driver for a new version of Fedora, but that isn't the same as breaking for no good reason).

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
    20. Re:Not me by strikethree · · Score: 1

      I bought a MBP for essentially the same reasons; however, I have grown tired of having everyone fucking tracking me, the government having back doors into all my shit, and essentially, having the core behavior of the operating system controlled by someone else. Which is why I reject systemd. Even though systemd is open source, it is forcing a whole "new" (actually, old in comparison to Windows) core behavior that is essentially against me fully controlling it.

      Regardless, Windows 10 was the tipping point for me as far as corporate control goes. I gave away my last MBP a few months ago and run Linux exclusively. My main computers are a custom built desktop system and a Dell XPS 13 laptop. Both ran Linux Mint Cinnamon flawlessly. Actually, the XPS is still Mint Cinnamon. The desktop is now CentOS 7.2 so I can try "embracing" systemd to understand why it has such wild amounts of support from the "top".

      It is buggy. I am constantly barraged by timeouts and other garbage.

      Sorry, was rambling. Long story short, find a distro without systemd and the few bugs that you see are worth it to escape from corporate control and monitoring. That is my 2 cents worth.

      --
      "Someone needs to talk to the tree of liberty about its ghoulish drinking problem." by ohnocitizen
    21. Re:Not me by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, Windows 10 is an abomination. It forces me to reboot on its schedule when it has updates to perform (it's literally told me "I'm going to reboot your computer in 1 hour to install updates), and I've missed/not noticed dialogs and had the thing just reboot itself on my while I was in the middle of work, which was lost. It also spends a significant part of my network bandwidth continuously loading updates.

      I'd say every three or four reboots, it goes into a lengthy update process that takes minutes.

      See, this is the single most frustrating feature of Windows 10. Basically, it tries to assert it's supremacy over your computer, your work, your schedule, in every way possible. I'm sorry, I am from another era and won't allow to be humiliated this way or to chance my workflow around a flawed product.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
  17. Pour salt in the wound... by mortonda · · Score: 5, Funny

    "We experienced much more traffic than we had prepared for, the website didn't go hard down but experienced slowness." And now it gets posted to Slashdot? Way to go!

    1. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if they were running it on IIS on Azure rather than on a linux box in their basement it would have kept up with the load.

    2. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by silkenphoenixx · · Score: 1

      Sort of a weak reverse slashdotting... ?

    3. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by mortonda · · Score: 1

      Or any OS on AWS, no need to get into OS wars on that point.

    4. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by nuckfuts · · Score: 1

      Alas, I don't think the Slashdot effect is what it used to be.

    5. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by Wraithlyn · · Score: 1

      Whoah, a 4-digit UID who thinks the Slashdot Effect is still a thing?

      You're like one of those Japanese soldiers discovered on an island who still thinks WW2 is going on.

      --
      "Mind, as manifested by the capacity to make choices, is to some extent present in every electron." -Freeman Dyson
    6. Re:Pour salt in the wound... by Shane_Optima · · Score: 1

      Whoah, a 4-digit UID who thinks the Slashdot Effect is still a thing?

      You're like one of those Japanese soldiers discovered on an island who still thinks WW2 is going on.

      That may just be the best simile I've read all year.

  18. Tech companies by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

    Tech companies are out of touch. Even $2,000 is too much for a laptop in 2017. Ridiculous.

    1. Re:Tech companies by armanox · · Score: 1

      For an actual pro-level machine? No, not really. Most companies have no issue spending that level of money on powerful machines if the need exists for it. If only Apple would do a pro-machine....

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
  19. Should be marked "Sponsored Post" by Drunkulus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is nothing more than an infomercial for system 76 hardware. There's not a single mention of a Mac user considering trying Linux instead of OS X.

    1. Re:Should be marked "Sponsored Post" by bananaquackmoo · · Score: 1

      Linux users often use macbooks because of the high quality hardware which works well with Linux. If there is no appropriate high quality hardware then they probably wouldn't use macbooks but would still use Linux.

    2. Re:Should be marked "Sponsored Post" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if it means any to you, I was just thinking "I may never purchase another Apple laptop" just the other day. Now I am reading this on Slashdot. Add one to the "Mac user considering trying Linux instead of OS X" bucket.

    3. Re:Should be marked "Sponsored Post" by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      This is nothing more than an infomercial for system 76 hardware. There's not a single mention of a Mac user considering trying Linux instead of OS X.

      So the part that would make it less infomercial like would be some anecdote about a customer making a switch?

    4. Re:Should be marked "Sponsored Post" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a current MacBook user who originally switched from Ubuntu to a Mac (OS X), I was surprised to read this "advertisement" because I immediately thought of System76 after Apple's announcement and I went to their site to do some option comparisons. I'm not being sarcastic here either. The site was not slow and worked fine when I visited.

      I'm just really tired of dropping loads of cash on Apple products. They work, and have worked great for me over the years. I'll still keep my iPhone over Android, but I think it's time I leave this walled garden and go back to open source. I want to use my cash for other more important things in my life. Maybe if/when I win the lottery I'll go back to just buying Apple again.

  20. 2017 the year of the Linux Laptop by Virtucon · · Score: 1

    Reusing an old slogan, it does work however just without the fanfare.

    --
    Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  21. Slashdotted? by Pascoea · · Score: 1

    it needed to upgrade servers to keep up

    500 Internal Server Error. Apparently not enough of an upgrade. Hopefully they are better at building computers than they are at running websites. =)

  22. System76 can't do what I need by krisbrowne42 · · Score: 1

    System76 laptops sound all fine and good, they're no more ugly than the rest of the non-Mac world....

    They fail to offer the one thing I need for a computer to actually be functional for me - Run macOS. (legally, without fighting drivers and hacking kexts)

    1. Re:System76 can't do what I need by tepples · · Score: 1

      What application does macOS run that neither Windows nor X11/Linux also runs? The only important one I can think of is Xcode, if you happen to be employed as a developer of applications for Apple platforms.

  23. Resolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why didn't they mention the fact that the System76 machines all appear to be 1080p? 2880x1800 vs 1920x1080 means 2.5x less pixels. That is well worth $400 to me and probably the majority of developers.

    1. Re:Resolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is no one else building laptops around the wonderful high dpi 3:2 and 16:10 displays that Microsoft and Apple use on their portable devices?

    2. Re:Resolution? by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure Dell (at least through their Alienwares) has some high dpi options, higher than Apple at any event. Not sure about aspect ratio. Probably some other companies too, but not sure.

  24. Doesn't make much sense by JoeyRox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I would venture to guess that the majority of Mac owners do not fall under the category of power users, where they would be inclined to experiment with a much less user/noob friendly platform as Linux is vs OS X. If anything they would consider Windows 10, which based on the posts at MacRumors seems to be what's happening, esp after Microsoft's recent Surface product announcements.

  25. Brilliant Marketing! by k4hg · · Score: 2

    I doubt they were really so deluged with orders they had to bring new servers online after the MBP launch, but they certainly need them now that they got such a lovely fluff piece on Slashdot! I've been an Apple user for 27 years, and I'm less happy with them now than ever because they are going too far in the consumer market with the computers. But their market and System76 has a tiny overlap. But kudos to System76 for getting this marketing published on Slashdot!

  26. What does Linux have to do with Apple hardware? by StandardCell · · Score: 1

    If all you wanted was to run someone's flavor of Linux, there are plenty of non-Apple hardware options better and/or cheaper right down to a Chromebook, or you just get a pre-2014 vintage Macbook. I don't think if you really needed to run Linux and only a Linux that a nearly $2.5k Macbook Pro was the first consideration, especially if you can't swap the memory/storage/battery in it.

    The conclusions of this article make no sense outside of the context of an advertorial.

  27. Welcome to the Dark Side by thrillseeker · · Score: 1

    We have Unity!

  28. apple is eating the seed corn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple is short-sightedly screwing over their own customers for a quick buck, but it's backfiring. My wife is (was) a diehard Apple person but even she is writing them off for future purchases.

    Most of the stuff we've owned has died within a few weeks of the warranty being up. We've been lucky in that it's usually a week or two before the warranty expires, but not always.
    Updates that disable charging devices not purchased from Apple. This sort of lock-in is commonplace in Apple, and they are not shy about breaking things that previously worked if it will force you to buy more stuff from them to fix it.
    Crappy design- proprietary ports everywhere, lots of software that will only interface with other Apple products. The sad thing is that from the standpoint of Apple's shareholders this is great design. And it is great until people get tired of it.
    Expensive- and the new stuff these days is not even an improvement over devices from the previous years.

  29. Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by el+borak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Depending on which side of the religious divide you occupy, people buy Apple because:

    1. It offers an unparalleled user experience.
    2. They're sheeple/fanboys and have to have it.

    You've always been able to get more performance for less money, and yet they still sell. So what's the news here?

    --
    An imperfect plan executed violently is far superior to a perfect plan. -- George Patton
    1. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by zuxun · · Score: 1

      Apple has the best foxconn motherboards the best intel cpus and no gpus. If microsoft only had to build windows for 1 machine and not 1000 the experience would be as good. I am a debian user and i think that windows has an UI that isn't as bad as the UI of macOS.

    2. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by Solandri · · Score: 1

      There's a third category - Unix programming gurus. OS X is a modified version of BSD Unix under the hood. You can pop open a terminal and use pretty much all the familiar unix command line tools. That's running underneath one of the best GUI shells currently available. If you're comfortable enough with Unix to be coding for it (web servers, databases, file servers, etc), you probably prefer Unix over Windows anyway. And the MBP becomes the best laptop available to you as a programming platform. Heck, you can even use the same laptop to do Windows programming because it uses x86/x64 processor which can either run Windows in VM or dual boot to it. And since you're likely test-running your compiled program in a VM anyway, it doesn't matter whether your dev machine runs Windows, Linux, or OS X.

      At least that was the case until they destroyed it by replacing the function keys with that stupid touchstrip. The are no longer physical keys you can touch-type to access common IDE commands like search next, debug step, etc. You've got a completely flat strip which you have to look at to make sure you're hitting the right "button", forcing you to take your eyes off the code you're trying to write. Apple gave the "cool shiny" design people too much leeway, and they removed an important part of the keyboard for programmers. (They also lost the "use OS X for daily tasks, dual boot to Windows to play games" crowd, as lots of games also rely on touch-typing the correct function key. Not that there were many of these people left since the MBP GPUs are years behind other laptops.)

    3. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by Zo0ok · · Score: 1

      And, the life time of Apple products tend to be superior.

      I was looking at a ChromeBook a while ago. I dont think I would have used it more than 2 years, and ended up with a MacBook Air instead, that I think will last for 5-6 years, at least.

      The ergonomics of Apple laptops are great (to me). The display is good, and the touchpad is centered at the computer - not aligned with the space bar. It seems System76 also has a touch pad aligned to the left. I dont get it.

      I would really consider to get non Apple-laptops, if I was confident about
      - build quality
      - ergonomics (display, keyboard and trackpad quality)
      - runs Ubuntu or Debian with no hazzle
      - "Windows tax" situation

      Getting into a store with consumer laptops usually makes me want none of them, even if I got them for free.

    4. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      > You've got a completely flat strip which you have to look at to make sure you're hitting the right "button"

      This may or may not be true. Firstly, do you routinely touchtype the F keys? I type around 100 wpm normally, but when F keys enter the situation, I lift my hand to reach them on any keyboard. I can't even reach them all. I think if you routinely and actually touch-type the F keys, then you will not be pleased with the power bar. The F keys aren't even in a standard location- the machine I'm typing on now has F1 about a half inch above 2, the Unix keyboard nearby has it about an eighth of an inch above 2, and I've seen keyboards with it above 1. Does F8 go between 9 and 0, or between 8 and 9?

      Unlike the other keys, there really is no standard. I think it will be terrible for your use case, but I do think that it is a reasonably rare use case. Maybe.

    5. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      So what's the news here?

      The news here is you used to be able to get more performance for less money buying a Macbook Pro

    6. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought my last Macbook Pro in 2011 - it's got 16GB RAM and (after a couple of upgrades with smaller drives in the process) 1TB of SSD storage. The RAM was great in 2011/2012, and few laptops offered it - it's now a big limiting factor for me, and even some of the better laptops in supermarkets have this much (the 'Tesco test' as I call it). I really love the machine despite it's flaws (it's had logic board replacements under warranty, PSU replacements, etc) but the form, keyboard, and trackpad are awesome, as is the connectivity (something that hasn't changed on the new MBP IMO, unlike some) and I like OSX, but I'm hitting the point where I need 32GB of RAM, possibly 64GB shortly. Hell, I can get a NUC with a decent CPU and 16GB of RAM, and there are similar tiny form factor devices with 32GB RAM options.

      I propose the new MBP is nothing more than a fanboi test by Apple or, more likely, a deliberate move to get out of the laptop space by showing that sales are down despite the 'innovation'.

    7. Re:Since when has Apple been about bang/buck? by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      And those horrible chicklet keys that they have on their pathetic little keyboards. Yuck, reminds me of the old Radio Shack Color Computer with their flat keys. At least not as bad as the TImex/Sinclair 1000, but not a whole lot better.

      Fuck Mac People, do you people even do a lot of typing? Those tiny flat ivory keys are hella terrible!!

  30. Re:No 5k Dispy, No 80 Gb I/O, No TouchBar, No macO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure thing SkankHunt42

  31. is he really saving money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    price difference noted in summary: $500

    value of hours wasted trying to get things done with Ubuntu instead of macOS: priceless

    1. Re:is he really saving money? by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Assume that he pays himself $10/hr. OS X only needs to save him 50 hours over the course of owning it for him to break even.

      Assume that he pays himself $50/hr. OS X only needs to same him 10 hours over the course of owning it for him to break even.

      Why do people always assume their time is free?

    2. Re:is he really saving money? by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There's a difference between "free" and "costs nothing".

      My time costs nothing. I don't need to pay anyone. I can take my time and do it my way, at my own convenience and stop when I like.

      However, forking out $500 extra is not something I can necessarily do at any point.

      But, to be honest, you're assuming that a) they're an existing Mac user, b) they can't cope on Ubuntu and c) things are easier to learn on Mac than on Ubuntu.

      Not all of those are going to be true. And when they're not, the time factor is common to both machines, or specific to your particular workload.

      For instance, after 20 years in the industry, I still feel a productivity drop the second I hit a Mac workstation. I literally feel held back on what I want to achieve. When it works, sure, it's fine like anything else. But when it doesn't, it's a damn nightmare and finding service and support is not cheap if you don't like the answer "We'll just reinstall". And I'm not just talking Mac desktops but Mac "servers" as well (P.S. a bog-standard Mac with a software upgrade from the App Store isn't a "server").

      Take, for instance, when I needed to renew a certificate. On one Mac Mini server we were using, I clicked Renew, it said it was successful, done. On another, identical, purchased at the same time, same spec, redundant Mac Mini performing the same functions, the Renew failed. Two hours later, after basically using a terminal and what amounted to OpenSSL commands, I got it to renew without breaking the certificate chain. UI options to do that after failure? ZERO. And guess where the Renew button is, go on... I dare you. It changes between OS versions and is tucked away in an obscure place half the time.

      Sure, it's not every day, but that's the instances I use them. And in the every day stuff, I avoid them precisely because of stuff like this. We have suites of Macs... the users avoid them and can get into all kinds of trouble especially where keychains or App Store apps are involved. Simple fixes but "only if you know how".

      Macs are nice WHILE THEY WORK and you use them to do simple things. The time and effort when they don't is multiplied enormously compared to competitors. I can google and in five seconds find an Ubuntu page for basically anything I want to do. With Macs, I can spend hours searching forums (central knowledgebase is bog-useless, a bit like MS KB, but at least most general PC forums can help you on a Windows PC) and end up at the answer "You can't" or "Nobody knows."

      Yes, I manage them. I manage hundreds of iPads and dozens of Macs, and some servers. And they consume more time than hundreds of Chromebooks, hundreds of PCs and dozens of Windows servers. Over my lifetime I've managed hundreds of them, thousands of iPads and thousand and thousands of other machines. And I still choose not to use them whenever possible because of the time-suck that finding out how to do something simple can be.

      Think of it this way: The Mac is more expensive and makes some functions easier. The Ubuntu is cheaper, and takes more legwork. Windows is the middle ground, not cheap but not simple either.

      However, when things go wrong, that flips completely on its head.

      P.S. I had a 2-week argument with Apple only recently because we can't create iTunes accounts for a school. Doesn't matter what they get me to sign up to, etc. they have no support for it, the systems they have in place (including Apple School Manager which is still in Beta over here), etc. does not provide me with the simplest of functionality to lock down an iPad, even with £100k of Cisco Meraki MDM kit. Their ultimate solution was to relax a security restriction so I could manually create iTunes accounts so that kids with iPads could sign in and use them. That's their solution for A SCHOOL with hundreds of these things.

      When things go wrong, or outside of their intended use-case, Apple honestly could not care less. I'd rather not pay for that attitude, and avoid having to d

    3. Re:is he really saving money? by TheFakeTimCook · · Score: 1

      Why do people always assume their time is free?

      Because that's the Linux mindset. And for most Linux users, it's probably true. Afterall, it doesn't usually cost anything to live in Mom's basement!

    4. Re:is he really saving money? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're making good points for sys admins. What about the other 99.999999% of the people who use computers? Would they also be less productive on Macs?

    5. Re:is he really saving money? by KlomDark · · Score: 1

      Ha! That's funny, the only Mac I own is a G5. Hooked it up and played with it enough to realize that their claim of "far more intuitive UI" was a marketing fallacy. Ain't turned the thing on in years. Junk.

      No, I can't see myself ever paying any money for rotten fruit. It's junk to me. Give me Windows or Linux, or just light that shit on fire.

    6. Re:is he really saving money? by ledow · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point.

      If a sysadmin can't do things they consider simple, and won't USE THE COMPUTER even as a client, how many old grannies out there are struggling just the same but plod along without trying to do *whatever* again because they couldn't work it out.

      Seriously, I've seen users who can't do multiple apps without closing others first, who can't minimise, maximise or use dual-screens. And Macs have things that are much more unintuitive on them too.

      I'm not saying "Argh, nobody can possibly use them". I'm saying, you can make up all the nonsense you like, fact is they are not inherently easier to use for anyone - at any skill level.

      Windows 8 had an office of people baffled when we tried to close a Metro app from a touchscreen without using the mouse. We literally couldn't find it, it was so unintuitive (we weren't swiping from THE VERY TOP of the screen, you see). But claiming - or even inferring - that Mac is so wonderful that those things never happen? It means you've never watched a user use one of those things for the first time, or sat with them purely helping only when they get stuck.

  32. Bump in Upgrades? by rockmuelle · · Score: 1

    I'd be more curious about any bump in upgrades for existing MacBooks.

    My 2012-era MacBook Air and MacBook Pro both work fine, save for the battery in the Air and the drives in both. I was waiting to see if it'd be worth getting a new one or just spending the money on upgrades. Verdict? Upgrades for the win. Rather than spending $3-4k on new computers (and a few hundred more on all the adapters I'd need to get my peripherals working), I'll spend around $600 and have both running fine for the next few years.

    I wonder how many other people reached the same conclusion...

    How Apple missed this opportunity for all of us to refresh our laptops boggles the mind. Maybe they just feel that they have enough money in the bank and keeping laptops out of landfills was their goal?

    -Chris

    1. Re:Bump in Upgrades? by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Chris,

      I totally agree with you. I was going to upgrade this year, but "what the h*ll is Apple thinking?". What do I get? Less ports, less physical keyboard keys, and a 60-pixel touch bar for a premium price? Apple's obsession with thin is beyond ridiculous and sadly Johnny Ives still couldn't bring the total weight under 4 pounds. If you want to destroy all functionality at least produce a 2 pound unit with a 12-hour battery life.

      Many of us will put up with an extra 1/8" if the laptop has some ports and we don't have to carry a bag of dongles around. The dongle thing is getting ridiculous and it is making Apple a much less simple choice. I wrote an email to to jokesters over at Apple and asked them to release a Fat Mac Book Pro with a replaceable, customizable, fat bottom that could have everything from a docking station port, to extra battery, extra SSD, more ports, more GPU, cooling for a PRO CPU, whatever. Not to mention, I like the magsafe power supply in case of cable tripping accidents. Additionally, the non upgradability of the unit is also a sad state of affairs.

      In short, I am not upgrading. In my opinion Apple an internal leader at Apple needs to rise up and knock some heads. Between Apple's bravery of taking the headphone jack of the future iPhones and the sad state of the MacBook Pro they won't be getting any more money from me.

      Apple has really screwed up and I predict this unit is not going to sell well at all. In fact, I predict a bump in Lenovo Yoga sales this Christmas, at least on the Yoga the one RAM stick and SSD aren't soldered in place for the sake of 1/16" of an inch. I will be hanging on to the iPhone 6S and MacBookPro 2013 until I see what's next. If things don't improve in the next year it may be back to Lenovo for my laptop.

      Apple, Apple, Apple.... you really screwed up this time.

    2. Re:Bump in Upgrades? by armanox · · Score: 1

      That's my thought. My 2012 (13") already has 16GB of RAM in it, when the price is right I'll drop an SSD in it to replace the 500GB HDD (and possibly remove the optical drive for additional storage space too). And to be honest, despite only having an i5 in it storage is the only real bottleneck that I experience on it.

      --
      I'm starting to think GNU is the problem with "GNU/Linux" these days.
  33. Press Ctrl-Alt-Cmd-Fn-OpenApple-SadEmoji to exit. by Pseudonymous+Powers · · Score: 1

    Immediately after the Apple Keynote, famed Ubuntu laptop and desktop seller, System76, saw a huge jump in traffic from people looking to buy its machines.

    Pfft. Idiots. Good luck trying to compete when you're spending all your time escaping out of applications and powering off the machine with errant key presses and picking your emojis from a list like a bunch of animals.

    Grow up and get serious, you dinosaurs.

  34. Reality distortion field by Raenex · · Score: 1

    Don't forget the magic pixie dust they sprinkle in every build. That's gotta be worth a lot, right?

  35. Did you look at the system 76's laptop by Pegasuce · · Score: 2

    I have looked, found nowhere the same form factor as 13" macbook pro. Only big ugly laptop to be found there. I'd go with the Dell XPS 13" Developer edition that is about the same price range as the macbook.

    --
    Salut a toi EX Punk anarchiste devenu nouveau mouton conformiste...
  36. No ways! by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 1

    Wait- you're saying that Apple stuff costs more than competing products? Color me shocked!

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  37. System76 are rebranded Clevo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    System76 are rebranded Clevo

    Clevo build quality leaves a lot to be desired

  38. For pros, there's no reason to choose Apple by kriston · · Score: 1

    "the System76 machine with much better specs is less expensive than Apple's"

    You could say this about all Apple computers since the day they started making them. For professionals, there is no compelling reason to choose Apple.

    --

    Kriston

    1. Re:For pros, there's no reason to choose Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Other than size, weight, battery life, wake from sleep that actually works, wifi performance, ssd performance, cross-device integration, speaker quality, macOS... but other than that, what HAVE apple bothered to do for their users?

  39. "closely matched" specs by thecombatwombat · · Score: 5, Informative

    I can't believe this is on the front page. This is the oldest Apple flamewar ever.

    I agree, the new MBP is . . . terrible. But the idea that this Oryx "closely matches" the MBP is ridiculous beyond the CPU. They're wildly different. Apologies, but . . . apples and oranges.

    The Oryx:

    - is made of plastic
    - weighs about 40% more
    - has a much lower resolution screen
    - lacks that touch bar and expensive ARM hardware (which granted, pretty much no one, including me, wants)
    - lacks any thunderbolt, let alone two separate thunderbolt 3 controllers (the big "pro" feature in the new MBP)
    - has a smaller battery and way more power hungry components
    - an SSD that I'm pretty sure is nowhere near as fast
    - doesn't run OS X

    These are the things that jack up the price of the MBP. Whether or not they're a sensible cost proposition is very different from "see, practically the same." Apple screwed up and inflated the price with things people don't want.

    It's cool that System76 is getting a lot more attention. I think I'm about to buy a Puri.sm laptop, the disappointing new MBP put me over. But come on, they are not the same. One might make a lot more sense to a lot of people, but the "see I built the same thing for way less money" victory dance is just tired, and embarrassing for the front page of a site that's supposed to have editors.

    1. Re:"closely matched" specs by zuxun · · Score: 1

      System76 sells computers for linux. I use debian and i think that macOS is the worst operating system out there.

    2. Re:"closely matched" specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Literally any current MSI or Asus "gaming" laptop is going to crush those MBP specs (including the "pro" features) with the exception of the nobody-asked-for-this-or-thinks-it's-a-good-idea touch bar. And it will do so for anywhere from $700 to $1500 less. (Typically $700 less for the MSI and closer to $1500 less for the Asus.)

    3. Re:"closely matched" specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And power to you. The point wasn't that OS X is better, but that it's what's driving the cost, and that the System76 laptop doesn't have it. The contention isn't that the MBP is worth it, but that the equivalency is false.

      I might think Game of Thrones is a horrible show, but it's still a bit part of what makes HBO expensive, and would be worth mentioning if someone said HBO and Hulu are "closely matched."

    4. Re:"closely matched" specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Literally any" is awfully easy to dispute. I can find one example that doesn't:

      https://us.msi.com/Laptop/GT73...

      Does that count as a "current MSI or Asus gaming laptop?"

      It has a much lower resolution display, and less thunderbolt, just for starters. It also isn't $700 cheaper.

      So can you hold up even one example of a $700 - $1500 cheaper gaming laptop with two (even as an option) thunderbolt 3 controllers, an equivalent HiDPI display, equally fast SSD, and the ability to drive two 5k displays at once? (Those are the features I would consider "pro.")

      Even without discussing size, weight, battery life, TDP, and OS X, I don't think you can do it.

      The new MBP is a disaster, but hyperbole and false equivalencies don't help make the case. They increased the price over the last gen while adding features no one seems to want.

    5. Re:"closely matched" specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe this is on the front page. This is the oldest Apple flamewar ever.

      I agree, the new MBP is . . . terrible. But the idea that this Oryx "closely matches" the MBP is ridiculous beyond the CPU. They're wildly different. Apologies, but . . . apples and oranges.

      The Oryx:

      - is made of plastic

      - an SSD that I'm pretty sure is nowhere near as fast .

      So, the OryxPro site says the case is made from aluminum.
      The specs for the SSD listed for the MBP are slower then those listed for the OryxPro.

      It is an apple to orange comparison, but you should at least be accurate about it.

    6. Re:"closely matched" specs by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      I bet you've never used it though.

    7. Re:"closely matched" specs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      absolutely. i run linux on my dell xps 17 with fantastic results, but this oryx is more like an ogre. i am going to buy a macbook pro for my primary machine. these laptops are not even close to the same thing. lmao.

  40. Comparing Apple's to oranges by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's true that the new MacBook Pro should have the option for 32 GB of memory, and it should have had a larger battery, and it shouldn't cost $500 more.

    However, most people buy computers for the software they can run on them; hardware specifications are secondary. Apple's customers buy Macs for iCloud, iTunes, iWork, Final Cut X, Office, Adobe CC, and all the other software they run every day. How much of that software can run natively on Linux? It's certainly true that you can find alternatives to many of these applications, but that doesn't mean that they're best-of-breed.

    Apple's customers want to exist in an ecosystem which allows them to use their content and settings across other Apple products, and moving to Linux will make that harder.

    And what about support? Mac users aren't normally the most technical people using computers, but they're suddenly going to be willing to troubleshoot the issues they have with Linux?

  41. It's a dual core by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    It's a dual core hyperthreaded.

    1. Re:It's a dual core by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      STOP SAYING THIS

      Why do you keep saying this?

      READ THE FUCKING TEXT

      "Apple's new 15-inch MacBook Pro starts at $2,400. This machine has a Quad-core Sklyake i7, "

      The $2400 Macbook Pro 15" has: "2.6GHz quad-core Intel Core i7, Turbo Boost up to 3.5GHz, with 6MB shared L3 cache"

      It appears to be a i7-6700HQ: http://ark.intel.com/products/...

      That's the baseline for the 15" Macbook Pro. NONE of the new 15" Macbook Pros are dual core.

      NONE OF THEM

      NONE

      You are saying this bullshit in like three stories now. Holy moly.

  42. You can have your cake and eat it by d0ran$ · · Score: 1

    If you want better hardware for running macOS just do it yourself.

    See http://lifehacker.com/the-alwa...

  43. 1080p? Numpad? No. by addikt10 · · Score: 1

    I'm disappointed as well. Like many others, I switched to a Macbook Pro after running Linux for years, with something not quite working, whether wireless or hibernation.

    But I looked at System76 15" laptops... 1080p screens, and a numpad. I wouldn't care about numpads, except it means that the trackpad and keyboard are offset from center. Won't ever do it.

    I looked. A Dell XPS 15 is the most likely replacement, but for now I'll stay on my 15" 2012 MBP Retina, hoping that Apple will update the older form factor with Kaby Lake, DDR4 with at least 32GB Ram. Would update in a heartbeat.

  44. revolutionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    explain to me how that touch bar isn't controlled by software. replacing hardware with software is hardly ever a revolutionary step replacing software with hardware usually is, e.g. hardware accelerated encoding/decoding instead of software encoding/decoding. pretty soon the macbook pro will be a tablet, you heard it here first. software is way too prone to bugs. can't wait to hear the stories about this thing failing and the unavoidable workarounds needed to gain back the simple escape button.

  45. Silly spec comparison, and System76 by m.dillon · · Score: 2

    I have a System76, but honestly I barely use it because it is loud and it has the worst laptop keyboard I've ever encountered (the key spacing is designed for people with HUUUGE hands and any lateral force causes the key to stick and not go down, making typing nearly impossible). And the battery life aint too hot either. The System76 is powerful, but inconvenient. I actually prefer my chromebook, which is much smaller (smaller screen, lower resolution, much less ram, much slower cpu, etc)... but far more usable.

    Apple stuff is expensive, but I wonder about people who complain about base specs all the time. 'more' is not necessarily 'better'. My dinky little chromebook has only 4G of ram but I don't even feel it when it pages to/from its SSD. There's no point stuffing 32GB of ram into a laptop, frankly. It's just a waste of power (and money).

    I will of course stuff as much ram into a box as is economically feasible, just because I'm me. I have a dual-socket xeon system with 128GB of ram, for example, and I have a broadwell desktop with 64GB of ram. Both are being used as servers and build boxes at the moment.

    But the box I currently use for my workstation only has 8GB of ram and I don't feel the paging to/from the SSD even with tons of Chrome windows leaking memory all over the place so I have been in no hurry to replace. In fact, my workstation is just a dinky old Haswell i3 box, and yet it has no problem driving two 4K monitors or playing video. It wouldn't win any prizes playing games, but then again I don't use it to play games.

    Update to present-day NVMe SSDs, which have ~3-5x the read performance of a SATA SSD, and I kinda wonder where these complaints come from.

    -Matt

  46. Why I'm not upgrading by wickerprints · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've been using Apple laptop hardware since the 12" PowerBook G4. My most recent purchase was in 2014. This is the first laptop release I am refusing to buy, after having said earlier this year (pre-announcement) that I would be upgrading.

    For me, the reasons have little to do with the performance-related specifications, and everything to do with what I perceive to be tremendous arrogance on the part of Apple and the particular design choices that were made that, in my view, clearly reveal their willingness to sacrifice--indeed, completely disregard--function in favor of design.

    The first problem is the removal of MagSafe. Ever since it was introduced, they've done multiple iterations of the MagSafe connector, to the point that it was even parodied by CollegeHumor, only to remove it entirely.

    The second is the removal of all ports except USB-C / Thunderbolt 3, and then charging $19 - $45 for each optional adapter, rather than including even the most basic USB to USB-C in the box. For a machine that is targeted toward professionals and can cost $3000, this is unacceptable. You need to buy the extra adapter just to have functionality that you currently have with hardware that Apple itself provided (e.g., iPhone/iPad). Then, to say that you made this design choice to improve the portability and weight of the device, is just sophistry: by making people buy and keep track of a whole slew of adapters just to recover the functionality they had before is a step backwards in portability and ease of use. To me, this indicates that Jony Ive only cares about what the machine looks like and doesn't give a fuck about how people in the real world might actually use it.

    The third problem is the lack of an included 3-prong extension cable. Yes, for a lot of people, this was optional. But making it optional out of the box means that it's one more hidden cost, especially for an adapter that already costs so much on its own. Why take it out of the box now? Is $3000 too little profit margin for Apple?

    The fourth problem, and the most telling of all, is the overall choice to limit the hardware specifications--for example, the maximum allowed RAM--on a device that does not have user-serviceable RAM, no less, simply because it would have impacted battery life. This is an outright lie, because all you should do is make the battery bigger and the device thicker. This tells us that Apple again chooses to put design first and usability and performance last.

    Why buy this product? It reeks of hubris, and this is coming from someone who, again, has been a long-time user of Apple products.

    1. Re:Why I'm not upgrading by theArtificial · · Score: 1

      The fourth problem, and the most telling of all, is the overall choice to limit the hardware specifications--for example, the maximum allowed RAM--on a device that does not have user-serviceable RAM, no less, simply because it would have impacted battery life. This is an outright lie, because all you should do is make the battery bigger and the device thicker. This tells us that Apple again chooses to put design first and usability and performance last.

      Evidently the RAM situation is due to LPDDR3 memory controller and the new Kaby Lake processors using LPDDR4. The Surface Pro suffers from the same RAM situation. I was hoping for something a little more for the refresh myself. I've been heavily looking into a ZBook.

      --
      Man blir trött av att gå och göra ingenting.
    2. Re:Why I'm not upgrading by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      Lots of fair points, to which the following counterpoints are possible.

      The magsafe was great, and has saved my laptop countless times, but they don't last very well, and often end up "not charging" for whatever reason. I could probably clean the contacts with steel wool, but I'm awfully afraid of leaving tiny bits of metal stuck to those magnets...

      USB-C is very much technically superior to any other port. Each port can do anything, no need to figure out where to plug a device in, just shove it in one of the holes. I'm even going to assume that you can charge the device from any of those ports (I can't find information the confirms or denies this). At this point, USB is ubiqutous, but it's also shit. It's impossible to figure out which way around it goes in first try, except you normally find out it was right first time, meaning you need three shots to get the bloody things plugged in. Today we're stuck with adaptors, in the future USB-C will be everywhere. Apple devices have always looked to the future.

      My macbook pro has 8Gig in it, and no matter how hard I try, it never feels slow. With even faster SSD, time spent paging in and out of that RAM becomes borderline negligible. It does seem a little bit stingy, but I'd be very interested in how much difference that additional 8Gig might make. And hey, maybe one day they'll make USB-C RAM... :)

      The third problem is the lack of an included 3-prong extension cable

      That sucks. I'm not going to attempt to defend it. You can use a regular radio-style cord still though, right?

    3. Re:Why I'm not upgrading by wickerprints · · Score: 1

      The MagSafe connector suffers from the same basic design flaw as every other Apple branded cable, which is the lack of strain relief, which again is Jony Ive's fault: he wants the cables to be as slender and clean as possible, but this comes at the expense of proper engineering. The cables fray, the plastic sheathing breaks open. Never mind the accumulation of magnetized particles on the connector, which I've not had an issue with personally. It goes to show that Jony's design is more important to Apple than anything else, because the environmental impact of all those frayed, wasted cables is enormous. It's a deliberately defective design that needlessly contributes to electronic waste, all to feed Ive's design ego.

      This is also why I hate the idea of using adapters: Apple's track record of creating any kind of durable cable is abysmal. Why should I spend $20-$45 on each adapter only to have it break after 6 months of use?

      As for USB-C being superior, I don't dispute that. What I dispute is the fact that Apple should include as part of the device any kind of connectivity that is needed to use the device with other Apple-branded products: so if you sell a laptop that only has USB-C ports, you should include at the very minimum a Lightning to USB-C connector somewhere. If a user has an iPhone or iPad, give them a fucking cable that works. Don't screw your most loyal users over. Give them a voucher or something. Let them go to an Apple store where they can take 5 seconds to verify your Apple ID and your device and give me a few cables that work natively. Otherwise, Apple is not sincere about moving the industry toward USB-C adoption.

      As for the RAM, I don't need 32 GB personally. But anyone who runs FCP will probably want it, especially now that they've been waiting several years for an updated pro desktop. A lot of Macbook Pro owners are professionals and at the end of the day, I think their main criticism is not going to be about connectors or even the RAM limitation, but the slow and uncertain Mac update cycle. For the most part Mac users have learned to live with it, but I almost guarantee you that these newest laptops have sold out simply because a lot of users just need the update despite the serious flaws. This latest gap in Apple's product line, though, has a lot of professionals wondering if they can migrate their workflow to another system, because in the PC world, there's just so much more choice and products get updated far more frequently.

    4. Re:Why I'm not upgrading by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. I share your feeling of loss regarding MagSafe. It's a little hard to let that innovation go, although we gain the benefit of now being able to charge from any port. It's a trade-off I wouldn't have made, but it's fairly reasonable given Apple's assumption that the new generation trusts the batter life and therefore won't feel it necessary to keep their laptops constantly charging.

      2. Apple has long been derided for a spaghetti collection of cables and dongles needed for all manner of interfaces. PCs have the exact same problem, of course, but users cannot focus their ire on any one, single brand. So, we lambaste Apple for a problem all computer companies have. And, yet, here's Apple now trying to solve this sore spot by adopting a universal interface that untangles the formerly haphazard collections of interface elements. Huzzah!

      Unfortunately, some people cannot look forward to the improved world rising on the road ahead. They can only look backward and bemoan the random pile of peripherals they bought years ago which are necessarily frozen in yesterdecade's trappings. Apple solves the problem, and the old folks throw up their hands in despair. Other computer companies will follow Apple down this very same trail, but their users are splintered across many brands and cannot focus their displeasure, so we don't hear about it.

      3. I wish there were a grounded adapter, as well. It seems like such a simple thing Apple could include.

      4. Nobody lied at all. The new MBP is thinner and lighter, which is always a fantastic benefit. Apple apparently felt the total combined power and speed of all system components would give most users the ability to perform their work with16GB of RAM. That's not crazytown. Sure, it'd be nice to have 32GB option for the rare person who might benefit from it, but I'm not outraged by the decision to trade a small annoyance for select users for the improved convenience enjoyed by everyone.

      Summary: Is the MBP the magic unicorn my inner child always wanted? No, but few hardware releases are. The 2016 MacBook Pro is a very good machine and I'll look forward to upgrading in the coming months.

    5. Re:Why I'm not upgrading by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      It's interesting. I have older magsafe connectors that haven't frayed, and newer ones that have. On the ones that have, they are failing along the length of the cable too, and splitting in various spots. It seems to me that it's not strain relief that's missing so much, but that the material the lead is made from has changed.

      I totally agree that leaving out a USB adapter is incredibly stingy.

  47. the experiance varies by MeNeXT · · Score: 1

    Please don't take this as apple bashing. I am glad you have a flawless experience but sometimes things don't always work that way. I have an iMac which no longer puts the screen to sleep. Right from a fresh reboot and simple login without opening any programs the screen never goes to sleep. All the Apple help and forums answers are just a waste of time. I spent days trying to fix it. I reinstalled from scratch and after a few months it comes back. The screen won't sleep. This is happening on two different systems and it's most likely something that I installed.

    Now on LInux or FreeBSD I have never had a system that worked that stopped working just because. I've installed many drivers that broke things but there was always a way to fix the problem. At least in Linux or FreeBSD changes are always in the same location not hidden in undocumented locations.

    There are other examples of annoying issues associated with Apple products but to say that they are easy to maintain just depends on your experience.

    In the meantime I'll just put it to sleep manually...

    --
    DRM? No thanks, I'll just get it somewhere else...
  48. Correlation does not equal causation by mbeckman · · Score: 1
    "People being so underwhelmed by a product that immediately following a new product release they actively seek out competitor's products," says Ryan Sipes, Community Manager, System76."

    Especially when the claim is self-serving. Sorry, fails the conflict-of-interest test. Shame on Slashdot.

    1. Re:Correlation does not equal causation by Desler · · Score: 1

      How dare you bring facts into this! Clearly Apple is doomed!!

  49. I'll take an old MacBook over a brand new System76 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know I'd take an old Macbook over a brand new System76 high end laptop, because it just happened. My company gave me a new System76 laptop, and after 1 week, I set it aside and use my Macbook instead (running Ubuntu in VirtualBox). The main reason is that the cheap plastic quality of the keyboard and trackpad on the System76 box makes user interactions with the OS frustrating and stressful. Clicks and drags lack precision, and both the keyboard and trackpad bend into the case in funny ways. The upper right corner of the trackpad won't actually click; instead if just bends into the case until it feels like it is about to snap the plastic.

  50. Development on a laptop by presidenteloco · · Score: 1

    Funny story.

    I had an ADHD non-technical boss in his tiny startup. He used to come in and interrupt and actively redirect us developers (on to a different most inportant development priority) an average of 4 times a day... When he wasn't fake-guffawing his way through endless sales calls well within audible range.

    It got so frustrating (I wasn't in financial position to just up and quit) that I started programming my own e-business idea on my 12" laptop sitting in the back seat of the bus for half an hour on the way to work every morning and back again after work. I swear to you I got more productive development done in that environment for that hour than the entire rest of the day, despite the multi-monitor setup at work.

    Working for that focussed twenty minutes to half-hour at a time, you were forced to define a bite-sized chunk of task and laser focus on it. Could pop in and out of screen overview to switch contexts, and just laser in on one context at a time. And you would be still working on the logical completion / follow-on of that task in the end-of-day commute, and the next day commute. Couldn't do the same at work, because the timing of the next total redirection was unpredictable.

    Big screen real estate is convenient when you have it, but you can also get more organized about your 2-click screen context change on a small laptop, and there are way more important factors for development productivity, in my experience.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  51. Display is 1920x1080 by eljefe6a · · Score: 1

    I have a MacBook Pro and I'm planning the switch to Ubuntu. The System76 display is 1920x1080. If you're coming from a retina display, that's not going to do it. I'm looking at a Dell XPS 15 as the replacement.

  52. Um no... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    It's because their laptops work as HAckintoshes quite well.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  53. System76 with better specs much cheaper than Apple by kbdd · · Score: 1

    That's a shocker...

  54. Bad use of that engineering by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple will price their products to reflect the development costs and engineering expense they invest to design and deliver new parts, services, and experience.

    Agreed. The problem is that in the past those costs went into developing useful features like a rugged aluminium body, a fantastic glass trackpad with gesture support, longer battery life etc. With this model that cost has gone into removing multiple important ports (one USB-A and a SD card slot would have been really nice), removing previous innovations (no mag-safe) and removing function keys to replace them with a silly gimick that would require me to divide attention between the keyboard and screen.

    On top of this they release it with a CPU that is one year old and a GPU that is one generation old. This is not the Apple of a few years ago that negotiated to get early access to Intel CPUs and used cutting end GPUs in the machines. On top of that they did not refresh their desktop line and are STILL trying to sell a $4k+ Mac Pro machine which is now 3 years old. Apple have not only dropped the ball with the mac they did so so long ago that the competition has run with it and scored and they still don't even seem to realize it. Just compare the new MS Surface Studio to what Apple came up with. I've used macs for over a decade now but this even really was the last straw and reluctantly I'm heading back to Linux and Windows now.

    1. Re: Bad use of that engineering by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      Show me an i7 Kaby Lake CPU for a laptop that I can buy right now?

      Ok how about the Dell XPS 13? Scroll to the last few models and they have 7th Gen i7 Kaby Lake CPUs. If Dell can do it Apple has no excuse.

    2. Re: Bad use of that engineering by rsmith-mac · · Score: 5, Informative

      Note that's a low-end "2+2" Kaby Lake U CPU. Apple never uses those. Apple uses "2+3e" CPUs in their 13" MBP; those CPUs have a faster GPU component and eDRAM, which is part of what gives MacBooks such great GPU performance (relatively speaking).

      The Kaby Lake 2+3e won't be available until Q1. Nor is the Kaby Lake 4+2 configuration used in the 15" MBP.

      The only way Apple could have offered Kaby Lake in the 13" MBP would be to use a slower chip than what they picked, which would be self-defeating.

    3. Re: Bad use of that engineering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's bitztream, the autism-hating Slashdot troll!

    4. Re: Bad use of that engineering by godefroi · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing the 2+2 CPUs chosen for battery life reasons, but I could be wrong.

      --
      Karma: Poor (Mostly affected by lame karma-joke sigs)
    5. Re:Bad use of that engineering by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised at how many people care about the SD slot.

    6. Re:Bad use of that engineering by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      The CPU being a generation old has been refuted multiple times. It is the best that's actually available.

    7. Re:Bad use of that engineering by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      I don't care that much about it but it is just one thing in a long list of stupid things they did wrong. The biggest for me are the lack of any USB-A, the crap CPU+GPU and the insanely high price and these, coupled with the utter lack of any reasonable desktop, is why I am switching.

    8. Re:Bad use of that engineering by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      If the precise model they need isn't available now it will be in a month or two so what, we wait another 18 months for them to update the line by which time it will be hopelessly out of date? If you only release new models once every 12-18 months you have to make sure that there is not going to be a significant spec bump just after, or in the case of the GPU months before, you release it.

  55. Gaaaaak! The early 2000's called back! by cpotoso · · Score: 2

    Gosh, these are not attractive laptops at all. Ugly, ugly, ugly. Also: specs leave something to be desired. 1080p displays? Come on, we are in 2016 almost 2017. If the MS Surface 4 can have 3000x2000 and cost less... Sorry, but I will keep paying the Apple tax.

  56. Count me in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm going for a Dell XPS 13 with Ubuntu. This would be the first time for me since 2004 that I'm not going to be using a mac for my primary computer.

    It seems there's nothing to be done when you're at the top of your game but second-guessing yourself and falling off the horse. Too bad. It was nice while it lasted.

  57. How Much Was the OS X License? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised Apple is back in the clone licensing market. Oh, they're not? Then I don't give a shit. Linux is a shit desktop. I only use it if I'm forced to for work - same as Windows. The sad thing is that Linux will remain a shit desktop because the reaction from the Linux crowd is to circle the wagons rather than improve it.

  58. No Choice, Apple Looses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I chose to go with the MBP back in 2009 because of the BSD, NExTSTEP underpinnings and a lot of ports and burnable CD/DVD.

    When the price started dropping on MBPs (2012 models, new) I got one. Although I upped it to OSX 10.11.5, I have had to do a lot of mods to get as almost a functional environment as capable as OSX 10.6.8. Why? One word answer: UNIX.

    So I can imagine I'll get a Surface Pro and run Ubuntu or OpenBSD or both as virtual environments, and a virtual WXP Service Pack3 for the DOS stuff I need.

    If Timmy Cook, Jony Ive, Phil Schiller and ECue were to drop dead I might considering an Apple "computer" product in about 5-years. I am not holding my breath for Lightning to strike them dead. A pity.

    Ja ja

     

  59. Linux Mint for Me by DougReed · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yup. Linux has mostly caught up. I am considering moving to Linux Mint. Tim Cook and Jony Ive have ruined Apple.

    1. Re:Linux Mint for Me by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 1

      I have two systems at home, one running Mint and one running Debian with the Cinnamon desktop. Unless there are some specific PPA repositories you are interested in, I would probably prefer Debian+Cinnamon over Mint. The Mint devs have proven to be a little more flaky than they should be. Notably, their site was hacked, they introduced some stupid package name conflicts, and their LMDE project has been a complete mess -- I think at one point it was going to be a rolling release based on Debian Unstable, but they were forced to go back to a normal release schedule. Cinnamon isn't bad, it just seems like the Mint management guys have flubbed it on occasion, and I really want the people I'm pulling packages from to have their stuff together.

      Another consideration might be Arch Linux, which has the best documentation of any Linux community. It is actually the best documentation on Linux that exists, as 90% of what it describes is applicable to other distros.

      But just a tip, if you're going to get into using Wine at all, use PlayOnLinux to manage your app installations. It saves much time and expenditure of sanity.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
  60. "is Windows really $1000 worse than macOS?" by nastyphil · · Score: 1

    That's not quite the way to look at it, these are not capital items. For a 3 year lifecycle for a laptop, is it worth $3 a day for the environment of your choice? That's the question to ask.

    --
    Dialectician. Archology.
  61. apple needs to stop the must be thin or open up os by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    apple needs to stop the must be thin or open up mac os X to more hardware.

  62. Paid Content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is purely paid content - but hey - websites aren't free.

    I do find it ironic that according to the headline, Mac users would switch to Linux when upset at Apple hardware. And to switch to Linux on a laptop. Linux has traditionally struggled to work properly on laptops. I highly doubt that Apple users will switch from "it just works" with Apple to "you need to compile all your drivers manually - and SURPRISE the soldered in video card of your laptop does not have any drivers AT ALL."

    Oh sweet irony.

    1. Re:Paid Content by cfalcon · · Score: 1

      These laptops are integrated around Linux, and you don't need to do any hassle for Linux to work on them. Installing Linux on a random lappie isn't bad like it used to be, but... I wouldn't recommend it in the general case. But these aren't random laptops.

  63. Good! by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    This is good. I'm torn too and fro about the new Mac laptops, but they're going to much of the lock-in route and have gotten more expensive. Seeing System76 and others get a bump shows what Seth Godin hinted at just recently and what I have been observing for about 10 years: Apple is losing the opinion leaders.

    Same with me btw. After the MacBook Pro presentation I'm still in doubt if I will ever again get a mac. Not a good sign IMHO. I've been on the Mac bandwagon ever since the iBook G4. Linux too, of course, but also Mac.

    But these days I'm also leaning towards Linux, as I did 15 years ago.

    My 2 cents.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  64. Some Mac users continue using Macs after /. post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...

  65. Not even close... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Specs are not even close, the Oryx look's like something from the 90's style/size-wise, and the screen is 1080p vs. the 2880-by-1800 on the Mac.

    Sorry, nice try at an advertisement, but these aren't nearly Apples to Apples...

  66. Spank you, Captain Obvious. by geekmux · · Score: 1

    "...In other words, the System76 machine with much better specs is less expensive than Apple's."

    Woah, wait a minute, you mean to tell me that another vendor sells the same or better hardware than Apple, for less?

    Nooooooooooooo fucking way...seriously?

    /sarcasm

  67. If I want a new Linux laptop I'll go Asus by phorm · · Score: 1

    Honestly, if I were to setup a newer Linux laptop, I'd probably be going with something from Asus. If you like aesthetics, the *Zenbook line both look nice and come with good hardware.

    I've had Dell's, HP's, Toshiba, Acer, and an MBP, but thus far the Asus laptops have been the most reliable. Heck, they even give a "first accident is on us" warranty, where the only cost for repair is the shipping to send it in. My biggest complaint used to be the 1366x768 screens but nowadays they have models with gorgeous QHD+ resolution.

    These Oryx things look pretty large and not particularly appealing, especially for people who are used to sleeker Mac models.

    *Note: I have not owned a Zenbook, though I've had various other Asus models. It's on my list for the next upgrade though.

  68. Macbook Pro 2016 - yet another big disappointment by shubus · · Score: 1

    Most of us were totally underwhelmed by Apple's latest MacBook Pro. The totally lack of compatibility with existing peripherals--including the latest iPhone 7 -- without a shopping cart full of dongles (which aren't cheap--and none are included) make Apple's latest offering a big disappointment. Latest specs are underwhelming, too. Add to this the increasing un-repairability of this along with all other Apple products. Since I have many apps the only run on Mac's, I opted to buy la 2015 MacBook Pro.

  69. In what way is System 76 laptops and MacBook... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...equivalent? I had not even heard of System 76 before this post, and judging from pictures of their offerings, I'd say they fail remarkably on the sexy-and-thin front alone. They don't look even remotely the similar. That's not to say there are sexier alternatives in the PC laptop market, but this is nowhere near the style and build quality of a MacBook.

  70. Misleading headline by unixisc · · Score: 1

    The above headline makes it look as if people are disappointed w/ the latest version of Mac OS, and have decided to go to Ubuntu instead. Rather, it's more that they're disappointed w/ the latest MacBook, and have decided to go for a System 76 instead

    1. Re:Misleading headline by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      But of course they are not disappointed with either. The cool-bar is the first genuinely new feature in the Macbook line since Retina displays in 2012. The intervening speed bumps might have been ho-hum, but this one's actually got something interesting.

      This is just a sales blurb for System 76 - whoever they are - that some idiot posted as news.

  71. Re: apple needs to stop the must be thin (+5, Tru by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they did open macOS the any hardware like windows, even if they sold it, they would see a huge drop in sales. I would like a hackbook.

    Right now, OS X is the only reason I like my MacBook. Before it was the Retina display but I can get 4K anywhere now.

  72. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? (+5, Insi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Putin more ram and an SSD. The CPU is fine. This can't be a real post....

  73. Just checking, but ... by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

    In other words, the System76 machine with much better specs is less expensive than Apple's

    Does it have a ten hour battery life? Four thunderbolt 3 ports? Looks like 2 USB-C ports and 3 USB-3 ports. No so much bandwidth for external devices. Retina Display? Or just 1080P? 76WH battery? Or just 60 WH? Is it .6 inches thick? or over an inch thick? Is it as lightweight? 4 pounds or over 5.5 pounds? Warranty coverage? Can I walk it into a brick and mortar store and get service and repair? Did your configuration use the IPS display? The 200 - 230 watt power supply seems "Yuuggee" so I worry about power consumption. Just asking. Your specs of importance might not be everyone else's ... The Only doesn't seem as competitive to me ...

    --
    - Tjp

    I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

  74. OS X market needs hardware competition by dcavanaugh · · Score: 1

    When a Windows PC vendor makes a bone-headed move, Microsoft is protected by diversity among manufacturers. They won't all ditch USB 3.0 and HDMI at the same time. As long as you can tolerate Windows, somebody will always offer a PC worth buying.

    With OS X, the consumer's choice in products is only as good as Apple's hardware. In the past, Apple made some really excellent decisions with the MacBook Pro. In recent years? Not so much. If this is the best Apple can do, maybe they should exit the laptop hardware business. Open up the drivers and sell OS X to the rest of the Intel-based laptop world. At least then, somebody will offer a 2016 GPU and 32G of memory in a machine that doesn't require a basket of dongles to connect a phone, mouse, keyboard, and monitor.

  75. The touch bar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is an aweful idea. Steven Jobs would be turning in his grave.

    1. Re:The touch bar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's replace keys, which have a good tactile feel, with hard glass that gives an unpleasant feeling to your fingers when you tap the glass. The guy who came up with this idea: a complete genius!

      My wild guess is the only benefit of touch bar is they get to scan your fingerprints and store it in their database.

    2. Re:The touch bar by Sir+Holo · · Score: 1

      Let's replace keys, which have a good tactile feel, with hard glass that gives an unpleasant feeling to your fingers when you tap the glass. The guy who came up with this idea: a complete genius!

      My wild guess is the only benefit of touch bar is they get to scan your fingerprints and store it in their database.

      The TouchBar is an absolute step away from "form follows function." It is an abomination.

      I look at the screens (3 of them) when working. To find a key, especially the "Esc" key, I reach and feel with my pinky. Esc has its roots in way-old machines, but serves a great purpose in modern laptops by providing a "Cancel" or "No" or "Don't Save" function.

      Return means "OK", "Save", "Yes", or similar. I don't need to look to find it.
      Esc means "No", "Cancel", "Interrupt", and so on. If I have to look down to find the fucking Esc key, then my productivity will drop significantly.

  76. And a further bonus- by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You no longer have to buy the mac and then install linux, occasionally jumping through hoops.

    Pay less up front for better hardware and a much better operating system.

    Win, win and WIN.

  77. Loss of MagSafe a deal breaker. by tigerstripe40 · · Score: 1

    While this may seem petty, the MagSafe connector has saved my laptop numerous times from falling to the ground. For me, MagSafe is one of the biggest selling points of the MacBookPro. No other laptop manufacturer offers a power connector like MagSafe and honestly the loss of the MagSafe in the MBP is a real sticking point to me.

  78. This used to be me by DigiAngel69 · · Score: 1

    Yep...exactly where I was a couple years ago...all Mac...but after the Mavericks crapshow, now on Android and Ubuntu...made the right choice.

  79. Clevo, not System76 by citizenr · · Score: 1

    its not System76 machine, System76 doesnt make anything (other than the stickers) its CLEVO.

    --
    Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
  80. Retard by strstr · · Score: 1

    This guy is a retard. You can configure the system he made for much less than $2000.

  81. Ye Gods... by Whatchamacallit · · Score: 1

    I am so sick of the platform wars... Every time Apple comes out with something, there are a crap ton of articles such as the one saying Microsoft is more Apple than Apple and Linux is the answer, etc., etc., etc. Some are click bait and some are trying to restart the Microsoft / Apple / Linux wars. Well here's some information from someone who runs or ran just about every top tier OS ever made.

    1. Apple Macs are more than just tech specs. You cannot compare hardware chipsets and revisions between a Mac and anything else. The OS varies. It is the combination of elegant hardware, drivers and operating system that work together to provide a very nice overall user experience. You simply have fewer problems overall. If you are a programmer it is the best platform. You get all the developer tools for free and anything open source runs on it. Plus you get Microsoft Office and Adobe apps, etc. that won't run on Linux. Mac's are fantastic for anyone managing a Unix/Linux data center or doing DevOps, etc. It's not just for those graphic artist weenies and photographers. It's a great family home machine as it will less likely get hacked and abused by malware (if properly setup). TimeMachine backups work, it's saved my bacon many times to the point of having a dead hard disk and being back in business a couple hours later with a new drive. Is it the right choice for everyone? Hell no!

    2. Linux is great, absolutely amazing; on servers. It sucks badly on laptops. Disclaimer: it is getting better and with System76 and Dell providing very nice Linux hardware platforms. But the GUI is nowhere near consistent with way too many choices. For me it's all command line all the time. Meanwhile, Microsoft is embracing Linux because of the Cloud. They are porting SQL Server to Linux, running Linux in Azure, bringing some Linux/GNU goodness to the command line in Win10, etc. Most everything that runs on Linux runs on Mac. I think the Linux and Open Source guys are winning!

    3. You want to buy a Dell XPS Developer Edition with Linux or maybe a System76, go right ahead. You want to strip out Ubuntu and run ArchLinux, more power to you! Just don't go claiming it is a viable replacement for a Mac cause it's not even close. I know all about Linux, been using it prior to the kernel 1.0 release, back when you had to rewrite two boot floppies to get the CDROM to install and there was no broadband. I know how to tweak it and make it sing. I've spent a million hours tweaking it. This is the reason I didn't buy an Android phone. It's a tool an appliance, I don't want to spend all my spare time tweaking it. I want it to work out of the box and I want the OS to get the hell out of my way. Open bag, pull out Mac, flip open lid, unlock, do work, close lid, slide back into the bag, rinse and repeat day after day after day. Plug it in to charge when it needs it. Reboot when you have to. Backups? Make sure TimeMachine or CrashPlan is working, done.

    4. Windows has actually improved quite a bit but it's still frustrating. There are still a lot of problems. I don't run Windows at home except for a few virtual machines because I fix computers all day long at work, I don't want to do battle with malware at home on my wife's PC. I converted her to Mac a long time ago and she never has issues. She brings her friends laptops home for me to fix running Vista on a PoS ancient laptop. I now charge $500 to even look at it cause it will consume the next 72 hours of my life fixing it.

    I've got 5 Mac's at home, a few iPads and iPhones it all works nice together. I have a SmartOS private cloud with 24TB's of storage at home as well. It's running about 50+ virtual machines many of which are Linux servers. A few Win7/Win10 VMs for when I need them. I run Plex and stream video to AppleTV's and iOS devices. I rarely have problems of any kind. Would I give my wife a Linux laptop to use as her primary computer? Nope, not gonna happen. Have I run Linux as my main system, most definitely yes but lately they hum away

  82. Posted from a Thinkpad by cbhacking · · Score: 1, Troll

    Specifically, from a T460s running Windows 10 Enterprise x64. It has the same trackpad design as the Carbon X1 in that link.
    Sorry for being so blunt, but if you're going to confidently and publicly state such utter falsehoods, you'll take some flak for it.

    1. Is it multitouch?
      Yes (duh). All Windows laptop trackpads I've seen made in the last six years, and many before that, have been multitouch. I've got a laptop from 2006 with a multitouch trackpad. The $270 netbook-thing my mom uses has a multitouch trackpad.
    2. Can I scroll any window using a two finger gesture even if that window doesn't currently have focus?
      Yep. Built-in option in Win10. Settings->Mouse->"Scroll inactive windows when I hover over them". Some mouse / trackpad OEM drivers (including the ones used in my old Lenovo) supported it on older versions too.
    3. Can I drag with three fingers?
      Not what I have mine configured for - three-fingers left/right switches apps, down/up is minimize/restore - but in theory, sure.
    4. Show the desktop with four?
      Yep, or switch virtual desktops using left/right.
    5. Right click with a (silent) two finger tap?
      Yes, of course; like multitouch, this is one of the basic gestures that has been supported for many years.

    No. Of course not. Because even if that trackpad did support multi-touch properly, Windows itself doesn't, and neither does Linux, making the support pointless.

    It's 2016. Linux people. Make something that's not a UI disaster area. And Windows people... maybe just give up.

    Have you considered the possibility that you're running your mouth off without a single fucking clue what you're talking about? You're making a bloody fool out of yourself, much like the person who modded you up. I thought the Apple "reality distortion field" was supposed to have died with Jobs, but if that's what you think the reality is...

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    1. Re:Posted from a Thinkpad by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      Have you considered the possibility that you're running your mouth off without a single fucking clue what you're talking about

      Well.. not until now... no...

      That's awesome. I'm glad Windows caught up finally. How about Linux, was I at least right about that part?

    2. Re:Posted from a Thinkpad by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 1

      Well.. not until now... no...

      That's awesome. I'm glad Windows caught up finally. How about Linux, was I at least right about that part?

      Nope. Linux has had multi-touch and gesture support at least as long as Windows and perhaps longer. I will concede here that Apple were first to market here, but they haven't really done anything terribly interesting with the technology since.

    3. Re:Posted from a Thinkpad by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Nope. Linux has had multi-touch and gesture support at least as long as Windows and perhaps longer.

      Yeah but how do you do the things he listed on Linux? Getting the hardware to work is one thing but that isn't useful to a user. I know if you use a Linux distro that uses KDE Plasma some of them work but they work different to KDE's kirigami applications, which work differently to what you get on Gnome which work differently to what you have with Unity and whether you're using Wayland (libinput) makes a difference because it reserves some gestures. Then if you have a distro that ships with a toolkit like touchegg it's different again.

      Referring to something like this in terms of "Linux" makes no sense because nobody runs just "Linux", they run distros combined of other software that may or may not actually implement this functionality and how it is implemented is not consistent across Linux.

  83. Just compare it to the zenbook. by sproketboy · · Score: 1

    Just compare it to the zenbook.

    http://www.bestbuy.ca/en-CA/pr...

    I think Apple is giving up on the Mac.

  84. Better alternatives than System76 by enFi · · Score: 1

    I'm one of the "Apple Loyalists" seriously considering Linux. It's fairly easy to experiment with software (my main difficulty is Lightroom, currently looking at Corel AfterShot Pro). I've heard System76 isn't great hardware despite the convenience of shipping with Linux, but I'm not sure what the best options are.

    Looking for a 15" laptop that can do RAW photo processing, I've come up with the Asus ZenBook Pro and the Dell XPS line. I've found articles on installing Ubuntu on both; they sound like they have some issues but it can be done.

    Are there clear winners for Linux laptops outside of System76?

  85. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never thought people think Adobe religiously.

    Shouldn't tools and alternatives (not gimp. sorry, that's a bad example) be used based on their features?

    Background: I have a few different tools for the job, one for quick draft, one for patterns, one for coloring and effect. I pick them depend on the requirement. yes adobe is one of them.

       

  86. Re:Gaaaaak! The early 2000's called back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    exactly... looks like a circa 1996 thinkpad that someone grinded edges off.

  87. Re:Gaaaaak! The early 2000's called back! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1080p display and about 80 minutes of battery ... on a good day.

  88. European alternative : Tuxedo by Herve5 · · Score: 1

    The german Tuxedo proposes even more models than Syst76 or Zareason...
    I won't post the urls here so as not to offend ad-adverts too much ;-)
    But they too propose machines as light as the MBP, with Kaby Lake processors, twice to four times more RAM, multiple, terabyte SSDs... and basically within same cost.
    As an amateur photograph, and having tried the open source Darktable and RawTherapee on the mac, my next machine early next year will definitely be a Tuxedo...

    --
    Herve S.
  89. far better than the XPS13 : Tuxedo by Herve5 · · Score: 1

    An example among many other configs on their site:
    15'
    32Gb RAM
    Kaby Lake i7-7500U
    SATAIII 2048Gb SSD
    M.2 513Gb SSD
    44Wh replaceable battery
    2Kg (with battery)
    circa 2400€
    And there are MANY other machines, lighter, stronger, at wish.
    I for one have been using macs since the Apple II. Next year, it'll be Mint-based Tuxedo machines.
    (an url for the config above : http://www.tuxedocomputers.com... )

    --
    Herve S.
  90. I had a friend working tech support for apple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His story reflects much like yours.

    He ended up doing a lot of repairs that were 'above his qualification level' because he'd been using a commandline under linux for years, and polished up on similiar techniques for OSX before getting the job. It turned out there were dozens of process failures in 10.6/10.7 that ended up with a situation where the UI could not or would not fix the underlying problem, and the only fix for the normal user was to call apple tech support and hope you got lucky enough to either be escalated, or get a tech who was 'tech savvy'. As one of the examples, it was possible for directory caching to fail in a certain way which would either fill up some cache or cause new files to not appear in the directory window. The only fix for it was removing files using 'rm' in a command window and moving through the on-disk (rather than in-UI) directory structure to find the right directory and clean out the corrupt files. He did this on at least half a dozen computers before it was fixed or he quit the job (I don't remember which happened first.) After working for Apple Tech Support however, he lost any interest in future work at Apple, as well as selling off all his Apple related audio gear and moving entirely to Linux. The average person won't be making that sort of extreme jump, but a lot of the more tech savvy stop liking OSX when either one of these problems comes up, or they finally much with the seamy underbelly of OSX and realize just how terrible of closed source shiite it really is, and jump ship.

    Without Jobs at the helm the cult of personality-like following that allowed Apple to regain numbers more proportional to its 80s heyday is going to start waning. The chinese 'case retrofits' for iPhone 6s instead of moving to 7s is an example of that. While the apple 'style' is still considered important, the content is no longer compelling enough to get people to upgrade, except in the sense of being able to claim they have the 'latest greatest' thing.

  91. What Goes Up... by jman.org · · Score: 1

    My '09 MPB is still going ... after replacing the superdrive and logic board, and upgrading to a SSD drive and the max of 8GB memory.

    Apple seems to forget that their premier laptop, while a portable, is also a pretty powerful computer used by loads of people worldwide.

    While it's nice to have portability as an option, in practice mine is usually plugged in, with an external monitor.

    Probably the real reason they won't go beyond 16GB isn't energy as they say, rather nobody's going to shell out for their hideously overpriced, soldered-to-the-board memory.

    I'm never buying another Apple product I can't work on, and upgrade myself. Unfortunately, Adobe still has no path to running on Linux, so it would have to be a VM of either M$ or Apple's own OS. Either way they're not getting any new hardware sales from me until they realize that while the walled garden might be fine for tech-clueless cell phone users, folks that know what they're doing don't like being held prisoner to their machines.

  92. that system 76 laptop is not cheap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it isn't a bad machine but it seems like for the money you could get a thinner cheaper laptop with comparable specs as a windows laptop and either install linux flat out or as a dual boot.

  93. Re: Are linux adverts still bad adverts? (+5, Ins by mspohr · · Score: 1

    Did that. Still a pig.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  94. Trying Ubuntu 16.10 myself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I dumped Mac OS long ago when Apple started pushing IOS crap onto it. Windows was fine until Windows 10 and Microsoft now decides everything for YOUR device. Trying Linux (Ubuntu 16.10) myself to see how well it works on my Dell 5559. Seems better than when I tried 14.04 a while back. Think both Apple and Microsoft are on wrongs tracks with their desktop operating systems.

  95. Applel shills' heads asplode! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tune in tonight at 10:00 for more on this breaking story.