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I want to buy a laptop for programming under linux and I have no idea what specific problems can appear (like "no drivers for device", "impossible to hibernate" and so on...)

What should I think of when selecting new laptop for linux?

I will run Ubuntu, C++, SBCL, ghc. This laptop is not gonna be graphics-oriented.

I've already owned Asus A9, Fujitsu-Siemens Amilo Li1718 and Samsung R40plus laptops and neither of them were good enough. All the time some problems with drivers appeared.

My requirements are:

  • long battery life;
  • good drivers support for linux (Ubuntu);
  • price not higher than $1500 (so MacBook is not an option).

About other requirements I would be glad to accept your opinion.

P.S. I've read what-is-the-best-laptop-for-programmers, but it doesn't answer my question...

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closed as not constructive by Patrick McDonald, casperOne Jan 25 at 19:27

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

16 Answers

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I have a Dell D820 with a NVidia chipset (I prefer NVidia over Intel for the graphic card but this is personal preference) running under Ubuntu for now 2 years and I'm totally happy with it.

Of course, it's not the only laptop on which you can run Ubuntu but Dell is not that expensive and most of things were running out of the box: 3D acceleration (with the proprietary drivers), wifi, touchpad, sound, modem. I had to do a few tweaks for touchpad (too slow) and hibernation but they are documented (see links below) and things might be better with Ubuntu's latest version.

My next laptop might be a Thinkpad as I still consider them as the best - but expensive - laptops. But the quality of my D820 isn't an issue and I'm not sure the price difference is worth it. BTW, Dell offers laptop with Ubuntu installed for a cheaper price than the Windows version. I think Lenovo has Linux offers too but I didn't check.

For a list of laptops tested on Ubuntu, check the LaptopTestingTeam page on Ubuntu's wiki.
For a list of laptops running under Linux, check Linux on Laptops.

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The links are really great, thanks! – avp Mar 10 '09 at 10:48
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I'd say thinkpads. There's even a wiki dedicated to support linux on thinkpad's.

You can buy them new or second-hand, and have a good battery life. Nice keyboard, and matte screen (you wouldn't dare programming with a glossy one), and support is great (still can find drivers for year-old laptops on lenovo's site), and the trackpoint is good for keeping the hands on the keyboard while navigating with the mouse.

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I have a Dell D820 (about 2 years old) that is supported very well by the upcoming Ubuntu 8.10. I think with Dell and Ubuntu working together the out of the box experience of Dell and Ubuntu has improved dramatically over the last 18 months.

Wifi and accelerated graphics works with a quicjk click of the proprietary driver wizard. The suspend works great. The experience has been very good.

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Dell ship some of their models with Ubuntu preinstalled. – idstam Oct 27 '08 at 11:54
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This summer I bought a 15" Thinkpad T61p with awesome specs for exactly $1500.

That included a 1920x1200 non-glossy display, a 2.5 Ghz dual core CPU with 6 MB L2 cache and a powerfull nVidia graphics card with 512 MB GDDR3 RAM (good if you want to do OpenGL / shader programming, too). The system works like a breeze with Linux, really every component is supported, even the inbuilt card-reader, harddrive protection using shock sensors, etc.

Thinkpad keyboards are especially notable for programmers, as they can be considered as being simple the best laptop keyboard you can get today. In combination with the very convenient TrackPoint (you don't have to take a hand off the keyboard to move the mouse cursor) and formerly mentioned display you get a very ergonomic working machine for a programmer. While the machine has very powerful components, it is still running rather cool and the fan runs at a non-distracting noise level.

I have to say I'm totally satisfied with this product, except that the on-board soundcard and speakers could be more capable/powerful, a glitch not relevant to the typical programmer. You also mentioned battery life: It is mid-range, three hours and more are certainly not a problem, more than four hours-better not bet on it. It is possible to buy a battery with more cells, though, and the DVD drive slot is also capable of handling an additional battery instead of a drive.

I would assume that today you get even more value for the same money from Lenovo or perhaps just save some.

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If you want to avoid all installation problems, buy a laptop with Ubuntu pre-installed. I bought one from Dell, who have a Linux section if you know about it. I'm happy with it, and have been setting it up for home software development. So far, I've been mostly playing with Mercury, having decided to try a distributed VCS.

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Any Intel-based integrated chipset (with WIFI,GFX etc) seems to work out of the box.

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I'm using a MacBook with Ubuntu ant it works brilliantly. Even suspend is working great when closing the lid.

The Ubuntu wiki has some top-notch information on how to install Ubuntu on your MacBook as well as how to configure almost everything of interest:

MacBook Ubuntu wiki

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I had some problems installing Ubuntu on my MacBook. It was far less painful to install it on several standard-issue Centrino laptops. They look less sexy, though. – BastiBechtold Oct 27 '08 at 10:15
I had no luck dual booting Ubuntu on a MacBook. There's some kind of serious performance issue and it runs like crap. – Matt Joiner May 16 '10 at 23:52
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Like someone said, ThinkPads.

I've owned three laptops. The thinkpad has been by far the easiest to install linux on - it had no problems.

I've also HEARD that it is the best by others.

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I used a Fujitsu Siemens Lifebook S7110 for some years and it worked fine.

Generally, I would recommend to use some model from the business line of one of the big laptop sellers. Business notebooks usually look less pretty, are more sturdy and use older (read: more linux-compatible and stable) hardware.

I would search for some decent core2duo processor, integrated graphics and an intel chipset, probably centrino-certified. This should be very linux-friendly. Also, a good measure of memory and a high-resolution screen won't hurt.

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Get something with all intel hardware and you will be set.

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I use XPS 1330 with Ubuntu Intrepid (with Dual boot Vista). Replaced the motherboard 2wice (free of cost) as it was the faulty batch. Performance wise it is the best laptop I've seen. Its nice, sleek and lightweight and very powerful. NVidia wireless and sound work out of box. I use Netbeans+Oracle/postgres+JBoss on it.

Thx, Sam

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hmmm... And how much does it cost? – avp Sep 12 '09 at 10:34
It'll cost around $750-800. I've been using it since 2007 and it is still shining as if it's a new one. Have Vista/Ubuntu dual boot and it has NEVER crashed (while working). – Sam Sep 14 '09 at 14:50
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I'd buy lifebook a530 . is compatible for ubuntu ? my ubuntu is 10.04 ?

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Works fine for me on 10.10 64-bit. Here is another user that confirms Ubuntu normal operation: linuxhcl.com/browse/product+fujitsu-lifebook-a530?id=7507 – SyBer Nov 14 '10 at 7:27
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ZAReason (just google them) sells laptops with Ubuntu preinstalled, and they have picked systems which play well with Linux, and their prices are tolerable. There are several others that do so, as well (System76 comes to mind, but their prices are quite steep). Dell offers a laptop with Ubuntu 9.10, I think.

Toshiba appears to have a serious competence deficit with regard to writing functional ACPI code (just don't buy one). eMachines had a $280 Celeron laptop that supposedly worked well (third or fourth hand information, I don't know from experience).

Just as an aside, a laptop may not be the best choice for programming. If you code a lot, you're going to go through keyboards (and laptops keyboards aren't nearly as easy to find or replace as desktop keyboards, they aren't generally cheap either). Compiling code is resource intensive - laptop fans are a pain to find/replace, too. You might consider a small cheap laptop for general use, and a cheap desktop with room for extra fans to use for coding/compiling.

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You are right, laptop is not the best choice for programmer unless the laptop is powerful and user has additional monitor and mouse+keyboard. One friend of mine has such a configuration: he uses one laptop at home and in office. I like such a solution. – avp Nov 29 '10 at 18:44
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System76 sells high quality, warrantied and supported Ubuntu laptops.

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I have a kick-ass Sony Vaio, proud to say the best laptop in the market. But it sucks being not able to install some kick-ass programming OS. It has all Intel hardware but still, it sucks not being able to install Linux properly, and I nearly tried all the distros available for newbies. In my old company, I used to have Thinkpad, and that was a good computer. I can't decide what to do.

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Do you consider Sony Vaio as not expensive solution?! – avp May 20 '11 at 7:35
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I have a System76 Serval Professional. I wouldn't buy another one. The laptop is great but the battery life is only 1 hour tops, even brand new. It has some technical issues that we've largely worked through. I still need to send it in for one last thing, defective memory controller or something. I just can't go without it for up to 2 weeks. I got some bad hardware and it happens to the best of them. So I may not be a good measure as to quality.

I'm going for a Lenovo X220 because the battery life is stellar, the specs are pretty good, and the price is right. I hope it runs Linux perfectly and I think it will. Love the idea of spending all day in the airport and on the plane and never having to worry about finding an electrical outlet.

I hate the Serval for travelling. I don't even bother to turn it on unless there is electricity available. It's that bad. I can't even leave it in suspend over a weekend because the battery will run out and I'll still have to turn it on when I fire it up on Monday. Suspend only works overnight. Otherwise, not enough battery.

My understanding is the Pengolin is only marginally better on the battery. After being mobile for a while, battery life is much more important to me than I initially thought. Live and learn.

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