Razer Wants To Build the Best Linux Laptop, And It Needs Your Help (facebook.com)
Min-Liang Tan, a founder, CEO and creative director of gaming hardware company Razer, has assured enthusiasts that the company is looking into developing good -- the "best" he says -- Linux notebook. He writes in a post: The Razer Blade series have become the default coding machine for many out there and one of the most common asks is for us to support Linux on it. Well - we're looking at it and we're inviting all Linux enthusiasts to weigh in at the new Linux Corner on Insider to post feedback, suggestions and ideas on how we can make it the best notebook in the world that supports Linux. So if you're a Linux enthusiast, do check out the introductory thread.
Only apps can app apps, so in order to make an appy apptop, they have to use an apperating app like Appdows 10 Cloud, the appiest apperating app! LUDDITE Linux can only run LUDDITE software!
Apps!
MSI's Dragon series is pretty damn close to perfect. They could stand to be a little lighter, but considering what's in there, most of that heft is probably heatsinks. I've had no complaints out of mine.
Enough said.
Looks like they want to compete with System76
Too bad Linux still use the archaic terminal. If the elitists could just shut it with their god damn terminal and add a proper GUI for everything, Linux would gain mainstream support. But as it is, considering you still need to use the terminal to do something as simple as changing the resolution when the OS doesn't support the GPU drivers, or installing an application... Forget any sort of mainstream support.
128 GB RAM
(2) 1 TB Solid State (Raid 1)
Best CPU on the market
Best Laptop GPU on the market
4K screen
4 USB 3.0
2 USB type c
HDMI out
Thin and lightweight
10 hour battery life
Headphone jack
All for $499.99
Are they going to pay me? What on Earth is so hard about putting together a Linux laptop? Thinkpads have been doing it for a decade.
All Razer does is put together over priced crap that breaks the day after the warranty expires. Fuck them
How come when I read this headline, I immediately thought of the car that Homer Simpson designed?
This is the current competition: https://betanews.com/2015/12/2...
A truly free and open-source software laptop... which allows a FOSS BIOS or UEFI replacement, FOSS drivers. No Blobs, or Intel ME.
Journalists, activists, and anyone who must have a secure, trusted computing device, need a modern alternative that be purchased off-the-shelf and supports Tails.
Requires a good nvidia card to be of interest, and support of discrete mode in BIOS so video ram > 2GB can be addressed. My key requirement is to be able to play No Man's Sky without booting into windows, and to be future-proof by supporting at least current gen VR rigs (even if the Linux software doesn't yet exist). Achieve this, with good performance, good support of virtualization, plenty of RAM (expandable to at least 128G), output to either built-in screen or external monitor, and make it a reasonable price ($1500) and I'm in.
This isn't everyone's requirement (or even all of mine), but achieving this encapsulates all of my other requirements (3d acceleration with good support for blender, etc., good CPU performance, plenty of RAM (or at least the ability to upgrade to plenty of RAM), VR-supporting video, multi-monitor & external monitor support).
I don't think so.
I'll stick to ASUS
Bring back 16:10 and 5:4 screen options; not all of us are avid movie watchers...
"The Razer Blade series have become the default coding machine for many out there"
Uh... No?
Show of hands here on Slashdot - which coders here use that as their default machine?
A battery you can remove and replace yourself.
Ram you can upgrade without a soldering kit.
Removable panels to access dusty components.
Japanese metal capacitors that won't die in 5 years.
A modular power supply board.
A screen the user can replace.
Keyboard options.
Ports.
Open firmware, BIOS and drivers.
Yeah, you have your fucking work cut out for you and if you get any 3 of those into the final product I'll eat my hat.
Keys that work reliably even if you don't hit them square on.
Full size up and down cursor keys with the traditional inverted T layout so I don't get cramps in my right pinky.
Either middle physical touchpad buttons, or at least ensure the top and bottom sets can be mapped to 4 button codes, not two
(i.e. the clitmouse and top buttons are their own mouse device) so we can map primary selection pastes to one of them.
Don't do anything that prevents the touchpad firmware's gesture junk from being turned off or ignored.
Bonus for an extra wide touchpad with a plastic guard that can be slid over the left hand side to get a smaller but more centered
touchpad for those of us who would prefer to rest our left hand under the space bar without generating mouse events.
Someone had to do it.
I would pay good money for a Tegra X1 or even better a Tegra X2 laptop.. I currently use a Acer Chromebook 13 w/ Ubuntu that includes a Tegra K1 as a daily driver.. something a little less hacky in ARM would have my money today.
We have enough of the shitty Linux laptops. We need a performance laptop, with:
at least 16GB RAM
17" 4k or 16" 4k display
at least 512GB SSD
preferably another disk, either SSD or HD
any graphics card (nVidia or AMD or Intel)
wired Gbit ethernet (it can have wireless as well)
USB3 and USB2 ports
Headphones/speakers, microphone jack should be standard. And should be overridden by a USB headset.
Note that I didn't get into the Intel vs AMD stuff. An intel i7 is fine, so is an AMD Ryzen 7 CPU.
Note also, that I didn't get into the card reader technology. An SDXC card reader is fine, if you want.
FTFA:
The Razer Blade series have become the default coding machine for many out there
I didn't expect this to be true, but at my current client we have two guys working on maxed-out Razers. One guy wants it for his Windows VMs. And the other guy runs Android Studio. (As for myself, I'm an iOS developer so I work on a MacBook, and run my server stuff on a Linux VPS.)
8 of 13 people found this answer helpful. Did you?
A lot of us waste too much time on Slashdot. How about a button that automatically posts "actually, Bitcoin is too unstable to be a real currency" whenever it comes up in a story? Or, posts complaint whenever a minority or woman wants fair treatment in the office, but calls for government intervention whenever it's about old people not being hired in job interviews?
Seriously.
Your neglect of quality control has been there for the entirety of your company.
If you're going to be selling computers worth hundreds or thousands of dollars, you NEED Q&A.
Otherwise, don't even bother.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Razer Wants To Build the Best Linux Laptop, And It Needs Your Help
- if that is the case (and have been around long enough not to bother not only with TFA but even with TFS) then I can tell you they already screwed up.
A company seeking for a direction from suggestions of their customers before having anything they can show as a product in the first place... what is it, have they prematurely gotten rid of a director or something? A company has to have direction, customer suggestions are great an all, but they cannot be the thing that gives your company its purpose, you have to have a reason to do what you do in the first place.
I want a 19" 1920x1200 screen, 10TB of M.2 SSD storage, 2 quad core CPUs and 256GB of RAM in my laptop. I want it all for no more than 1200USD.
Thanks.
You can't handle the truth.
The comments are not filled with a pissing contest over which linux OS is better.
You are all a disappointment.
..I want a pony, and a lazer gun, and a new bike, and a robot that will do my homework, and a dog that won't chew my Hotwheels, and a dinosaur.........
Asking customers about what they want is kind of like asking 200 people to decide on toppings for one pizza, you might as well throw a dart at a feature dartboard.
Implement the things that everybody wants out of a laptop:
- Portable
- Good battery
- Reliable
For the opensource driver efforts, I would go for an AMD GPU.
Latest generation is supported out of the box by amdgpu opensource drivers all the way up to opengl 4.5 (thanks to mesa), already some opensource Vulkan (thanks to radv), and the kernel drm module is shared with the closed source amdgpu-pro, so it's basically just switching a few user-space libraries around to run the closed source driver if you need them that much (AMD only recommands them for some specific professional use cases) your kernel of whatever dristribution already has the drm module even if it's a beta pre-release.
AMD actively pays linux developers
(and since recently, a lot of them, now that they're trying to rebuild a shared codebase between their windows and linux drivers with DAL/DC)
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
Management firmware is basically a minimalist OS running on a separate low-power core inside the chipset.
Let them make that firmware opensource, problem solved.
(I haven't checked, but I'm quite sure it's just come embed linux system (busybox, uclib, etc.) running on a low-power ARM core, with special driver to run the hardware connected on the GPIO pins)
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
... is the reason you don't ask 'people' to create a Linux laptop...
And people wonder why Linux has so many damn 'flavors'...
The best Linux machines are interesting architectures but there is no Windows support and unless they are willing to make a laptop that only runs open kernels like Linux (which they aren't) they will never make the best Linux laptop.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
The year of the Linux Laptop!
Please make a light device with a tough body, 1440p screen, and long lasting battery, that's all I need.
They can't even make a Windows 10 machine I would buy.
They need to look at Gigabyte so they see how it's done.
Is it going to require a persistent internet connect + named account to use it as anything but a basic brick?
There is no XUL, only WebExtensions...
I picked one (stealth) up last month and it's my primary work computer. Battery life was the real winner.
Security is the most important aspect of coding for a large organization.
We require full access, no "trusted" components. This means full firmware, full datasheets on components, design specs, as much as realistically possible.
Put that CTRL key where it *belongs*!
Don't paint it black with red skulls, cobras, and psychoclowns. And don't call it the Razer Kraken DeathAdder Cobra Venom Kyllstryke BludDeth Copperhead Pit Viper XTREEM FragZ edition like we're a bunch of 90's Rob Liefeld comic obsessed dudebros
Just put Tux on the Windows key.
For extra points, build-in a full-sized clicky keyboard. Yes, it will be thick.
They could add a dedicated key to play a random Linus rant.
Razer doesn't need our help to build an overpriced laptop with a lot of LEDs. They do this just fine already.
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
Avoid Gnome, KDE and Unity. They are nothing but deadweight.
Please don't put any LEDs in it!
There you go, somebody had to say it.
- A physical switch that cuts power to the camera and microphone.
- Another one for WiFi
- Lots of ports. If it's a Linux laptop must be mainly for nerds, and we have lots of equipment and move in lots of different environments. I want to be able to connect to an old monitor if needed. How many ports? Start adding and when you reach the eSATA, you may stop.
- It should be a phone, with SIM and all that, and should run Android in parallel with Linux, for phone apps. Good integration would be nice.
-GPS, Bluetooth. I'ts a phone too, right?
- I should have control of the phone part, like being able to trick the phone part into thinking that it's in another location, things like that.
- Multi purpose dock with possible extra battery, extra disk, DVD, or more ports.
- Many possible disk, M.2, SATA, etc.
- Docking station connection.
- 8 cores, virtual machines are all the rage now, and they like cores.
- Lots of memory, see above.
- I personally couldn't care less about graphic performance, or graphic pixel density, as long as it's reasonable for working.
Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
That would be a good start.
Can we get a touchpad that doesn't suck? 10 year old MacBook tpads are better than literally everything else out there.
150-200 should do it. Be sure to provide updated drivers for each of them of course. And it would help if you made systemd an option.
Do not hire Tim Cook, not cut a row of keys, and create a TouchBar.
Avoid system, and bring out a notebook base on FreeBSD.
...or this seems a shitty commercial advertising move? "we care"...bah
MS has always "realized" the value of a terminal.
maybe you can tell us all about how much you can get done when you plug a terminal into a windows machine? none at all!
It's not like they just one day realized they should jump on the shell bandwagon like Johny Come Lately.
yeah they have been making computers with serial ports since the 1980s and you still can't administer one from a serial port
Holy fu***** shit. Everyone wants like 10tb disk space and two 90w processors. Are you out of your mind, just buy desktop then. What battery life are you looking for? Like 2, 3 minutes max?
How about a Razer laptop with an I7, Nvidia 1060, and 240 Gig SSD? Just bought one and wiped Windows off. 5 second boot to Mint.
Look at what made the Thinkpad great and fix what Lenovo broke on it. Done.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Build a computer with these specs (regardless of price) and I will purchase it:
- AMD Ryzen CPU
- AMD GPU
- 1 TB SSD
- Mechanical keyboard. Think K70. Arrow keys and full numpad support. Keys should go into a fully depressed state upon screen close to reduce space requirements.
- 17" screen, 18.5 available. Preferably 4k, but not a requirement.
- 16+ GB of RAM
- Weight should be under 10 LB. Preferably under 5 LB. Bonus points for under 3 LB.
A Linux laptop has to run more flavours of Linux than just bloody Ubuntu. Ship it with tested images of Suse, Red Hat, Gentoo and others on a blue ray disk. Include documentation on which drivers to load and blacklist. I'm thinking of you here Broadcom.
Will they lock it down so I can't make changes to files under /etc/ unless I'm connected to the Cloud, and logged into my Razer account? You know, to build product continuity with their mice and keyboards.
= Reusable / Modular but practical computing platforms =
For God's sake make a laptop where, when the processors, storage, RAM cannot be upgraded anymore to keep up with age the rest of the machine ( the Display, the speakers, keyboard, touchpad etc.) can still be used over standard interfaces like HDMI, 3.5 mm Jack,, USB, PCI express etc. , so that it can be re-used instead of reaching the landfill. E-waste recycling is not yet at it's best in most of the world. And being able to quickly re-use the device in hand in ways unplanned for is what makes a tech-geek the happiest, in addition to mother nature - for keeping her and her children healthy.
Make it semi-modular, with the goals to be both re-usable and hot-swappable. Do not try to be another project ARA.
One way of achieving the above in a way the geeks would love: :
A seperate Compute Module in the spirit of Rpi-compute-module : the size of a small tablet-pc consisting of
* RAM, CPU
* and a small battery(enough to allow hotswapping between terminal),
* wifi, Bluetooth
* an SSD and
*an "expansion port".
This would come in several flavours - from netbook like power with max display res of full HD good for simple computing on-the go, to powerfull ones with Dual 4k displays enough for extreme gaming. These can dock into "Terminal"s and hot-swap between them.
The "Terminal" could be any of your "Terminal" products ( Each with it's own big battery/power supply) :
* A 10 inch laptop like dock, 15 inch, 20 Inch. WIth / Without touch-screen.
* Slim ones with membrane keyboards, small battery
* Fat ones with mechanical keyboards.
* Convertible ones - by detaching or twisting
* A "PC" Like Dock: which simply converts the expansion port into
* 1 or 2 HDMIs
* 4 USB ports,
* ethernet
* audio ports (from HDMI)
* and probably a Hot swappable SATA Port.
* A few different sizes of tablet like Interfaces.
Or any exotic but practical types of "Terminals"
* An "All in one desktop" like terminal with display and sound, with laser projection keyboard built under the display. And a Wacom like digitizer.