On 06/26/18 11:03, Marco van Hulten wrote:
Robert,
On 25 Jun 22:01 Robert Gilaard wrote:
I am just researching this as well and have settled on the Dell
laptops because they come pre-configured with Ubuntu and therefore I
assume they will be opensource friendly.
It could be fine, but I would
Tue, 26 Jun 2018 15:47:31 -0400 Rupert Gallagher
> What crap is this?
YOURS. What you put into a system is what you get from the same system..
Hi,
Stuart Longland wrote:
The IBM Thinkpads… sure, they worked well. The Lenovo ones? Looking at
the ones around the office, they've been a bit hit-and-miss, on both
Linux and their out-of-the-box Windows installs.
that is true... the latest IBM heritage you can get is the T43, although
at 2:53 PM, li...@wrant.com wrote:
Mon, 25 Jun 2018 22:01:42 + (UTC) Robert Gilaard
I am just researching this as well and have settled on the Dell
Hi Robert, Rupert,
Email coming from Yahoo is flagged as phishing scam, wastes time digging.
**This is unacceptable advice**
Emphasis
What crap is this?
On Tue, Jun 26, 2018 at 20:53, wrote:
> Your other threads on server boards and systems make much more sense now.
You are off topic, and have no fucking clue of what you are talking about.
Mon, 25 Jun 2018 22:01:42 + (UTC) Robert Gilaard
> I am just researching this as well and have settled on the Dell
Hi Robert, Rupert,
Email coming from Yahoo is flagged as phishing scam, wastes time digging.
This is unacceptable advice, something very wrong with the advertisement.
Search
Generally the Lenovo laptops works really well, nothing beats the IBM
days, but I have at the moment around 90 or so X1 Carbon's out in the
field in various generations from generation 2 all the way to latest 6th
gen., never had problems with the Linux support or stability of the
laptops.
Can't
On 26/06/18 18:03, Marco van Hulten wrote:
> In retrospect, I wish I took the similarly spec'ed Lenovo Thinkpad that
> my employer also offered, because Thinkpads are said to be "opensource
> friendly" (but that may be just as well be wishful thinking).
The IBM Thinkpads… sure, they worked well.
ThinkPads use devices for which there are open source devices for everything,
as far as I know. Still, hardware support in the BSDs lags Linux to varying
degrees, because of slower hardware. (My 2015 E550, for example, still lacked
full video support in FreeBSD RELEASE, last time I looked.
In
Robert,
On 25 Jun 22:01 Robert Gilaard wrote:
> I am just researching this as well and have settled on the Dell
> laptops because they come pre-configured with Ubuntu and therefore I
> assume they will be opensource friendly.
It could be fine, but I would not just assume this. The
I am just researching this as well and have settled on the Dell laptops
because they come pre-configured with Ubuntu and therefore I assume they will
be opensource friendly. I have short listed:1. Dell Precision 7520 ($1502)2.
Dell Precision 7720 ($1412)3. Dell Precision 3520 ($1352)
Prices
I looked into all of your comments, and I thank you for it. The
coreboot/libreboot way was very tempting, but not competitive pricewise. I no
longer have a desktop since the past century, spoiled by three MBPs, and need
something robust, light, and performing. I spotted an offer for a new
X200 is a bad idea, Core 2 Duos will never get microcode updates for Spectre
bugs.
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Thu, 21 Jun 2018, at 08:30, flipchan wrote:
> I got the x200 with libreboot and openbsd
>
> On June 19, 2018 10:47:24 AM UTC, Kaya Saman wrote:
> >I couldn't say
I got the x200 with libreboot and openbsd
On June 19, 2018 10:47:24 AM UTC, Kaya Saman wrote:
>I couldn't say for the compatibility with OpenBSD though I have read
>other people running on them, but how about Lenovo??
>
>
>I've got an X220 which I run a Linux distro on which I'm really happy
In his defense, you did exactly that which you are accusing him of, not
providing "technical" arguments. "Oh look at this laptop which I've
apparently never used but I'd recommend you look into anyway."
"I hear they're quite nice, and are running coreboot straight from the
factory." It sounds
I spoke with Todd Weaver at LibrePlanet about running OpenBSD on Purism.
I suggested that the company install a bunch of operating systems and
post dmesg, but I don't think they have done that yet.
If I remember correctly, he also said he would be happy to provide
a refurbished laptop to a
>
> Mvh, Johan
> —
> Smartphone. Ja... just det.
>
> > 20 juni 2018 kl. 21:36 skrev Patrick Harper :
> >
> > HP EliteBook 745 G2?
> >
> > --
> > Patrick Harper
> > paia...@fastmail.com
> >
> >> On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 09:01, Tho
be just my specimen but
then again, maybe not.
Mvh, Johan
—
Smartphone. Ja... just det.
> 20 juni 2018 kl. 21:36 skrev Patrick Harper :
>
> HP EliteBook 745 G2?
>
> --
> Patrick Harper
> paia...@fastmail.com
>
>> On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 09:01, Thomas Fr
HP EliteBook 745 G2?
--
Patrick Harper
paia...@fastmail.com
On Wed, 20 Jun 2018, at 09:01, Thomas Frohwein wrote:
> No AMD laptop recommendations in this day and age? Also buying used or
> refurbished laptops on eBay is a security risk from the outset - ask
> yourself how well
No AMD laptop recommendations in this day and age? Also buying used or
refurbished laptops on eBay is a security risk from the outset - ask
yourself how well you would be at spotting if someone had tampered e.g.
with the webcam or the firmware? With new hardware, you have at least a
reasonable
I'm quite happy with my Asus Zenbook 3 (UX390UA). It's thinner,
lighter and more powerful than the current MacBooks and costs about
1100 EUR now.
On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 12:37 PM, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
> I'm done with my 10 years old 1200EUR MacBookPro. It served me well, every
> day, but is
You can get a pretty good refurbished 3th gen thinkpad x1 carbon under 900$.
I've baught two on ebay over the last year,
On 06/19/18 11:20, li...@wrant.com wrote:
Tue, 19 Jun 2018 09:59:45 -0700 Jordan Geoghegan
Have you considered one of the Librem laptops by Purism? I hear they're
quite nice, and are running coreboot straight from the factory.
The pinnacle of bullshit talk, utter nonsense, no technical value
On 06/19/18 03:37, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
I have 1500EUR for a new laptop. What would you buy with it?
On 06/19, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
Have you considered one of the Librem laptops by Purism? I hear they're
quite nice, and are running coreboot straight from the factory.
They run
On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 21:16, Scott Bonds wrote:
> On 06/19, Jordan Geoghegan wrote:
>>Have you considered one of the Librem laptops by Purism? I hear they're quite
>>nice, and are running coreboot straight from the factory!
> They run OpenBSD fine with some caveats:
>
Tue, 19 Jun 2018 09:59:45 -0700 Jordan Geoghegan
> Have you considered one of the Librem laptops by Purism? I hear they're
> quite nice, and are running coreboot straight from the factory.
The pinnacle of bullshit talk, utter nonsense, no technical value at all.
> Tue, 19 Jun 2018 06:37:18
Have you considered one of the Librem laptops by Purism? I hear they're
quite nice, and are running coreboot straight from the factory.
On 06/19/18 03:37, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
I'm done with my 10 years old 1200EUR MacBookPro. It served me well, every day,
but is now falling apart,
I use 6.3 on my T450S. Works great. Also have installed easily on the Dell
E7240 and E7440. I prefer the Thinkpad but the Dell is solid also. You can
probably get one of each for under $1000. Likely you will want to replace the
battery either way but all of these machines are available used
I love my DELL Latitude E7240 :-)
June 19, 2018 1:01 PM, "Jeffrey Joshua Rollin" wrote:
> Definitely second the ThinkPad recommendations. I have an X230i, bought used,
> on which I currently
> run OpenBSD 6.3, and an E550 on which I've used OpenBSD in the past; both run
> perfectly as of
On Tue, Jun 19, 2018 at 06:37:18AM -0400, Rupert Gallagher wrote:
>
> I have 1500EUR for a new laptop. What would you buy with it?
I myself have worn out a few thinkpads over the years, but my last couple of
laptops have been Clevo rebrands - local outfits tend to slap their own brands
on them,
Definitely second the ThinkPad recommendations. I have an X230i, bought used,
on which I currently run OpenBSD 6.3, and an E550 on which I've used OpenBSD in
the past; both run perfectly as of 6.2, except for the fingerprint reader on
the X (although to be fair I haven't tried that again
I would opt for a Thinkpad. Actually working with a T460s; runs like a
charm. If you are looking for mobility, a T series should fit. If you need
more horsepower take a look at P series.
Of course those are my preferences, YMMV!
Regards.
El mar., 19 jun. 2018 a las 12:41, Rupert Gallagher ()
I couldn't say for the compatibility with OpenBSD though I have read
other people running on them, but how about Lenovo??
I've got an X220 which I run a Linux distro on which I'm really happy
with though the i7 CPU does seem to overheat for some reason, though I
seem to have this issue with
I'm done with my 10 years old 1200EUR MacBookPro. It served me well, every day,
but is now falling apart, finally.
I would buy a new one if only Steve Jobs would be alive and keeping Apple
inspired. The new models are meticulously designed to make you suffer:
expensive, slow cpu, soldered ram,
Mihai Popescu [mih...@gmail.com] wrote:
> Folks, pay attention, please! The OP asked about a laptop.
> Pansonic Thoughbook is not a laptop! It's a real desktop.
>
I was talking about the Panasonic _Toughbook_ which is definitely a laptop.
The CF-C1 and CF-19MK3/MK4/MK5 models are all very
Thanks for all the support everyone. I'm weighing my options.
-Nate
On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 04:20:15PM -0500, Donald Allen wrote:
> On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 3:06 PM, Mihai Popescu wrote:
>
> > Folks, pay attention, please! The OP asked about a laptop.
> > Pansonic Thoughbook
On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 3:06 PM, Mihai Popescu wrote:
> Folks, pay attention, please! The OP asked about a laptop.
> Pansonic Thoughbook is not a laptop! It's a real desktop.
>
I think the folks *are* paying attention. For example:
Folks, pay attention, please! The OP asked about a laptop.
Pansonic Thoughbook is not a laptop! It's a real desktop.
Thanks.
I picked up a Core 2 Duo Toughbook for $40 US on eBay a month or so back. I
had to spend another $9 to get an Intel WiFi card for it but it worked
right out of the box. With an older processor and only 4gb of RAM it isn't
a powerhouse dev machine, but for email, web, etc it works great. The wifi
On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 07:46:30AM -0600, Jordon wrote:
> > On Nov 12, 2016, at 5:36 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> >
> > On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 08:03:04PM -0600, jordon wrote:
> >> WiFi Just Works!
> >
> >> iwm0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Dual Band Wireless AC 8260" rev
On Sat, 12 Nov 2016 07:25:11 -0600
Chris Bennett wrote:
>
> I also notice that Thinkpads and Toughbooks seem to be the preferred
> choices for a cheaper laptop. I need a newer laptop too, so I will
> look into those on ebay.
>
> Thanks
> Chris Bennett
>
> On Nov 12, 2016, at 5:36 AM, Stefan Sperling wrote:
>
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 08:03:04PM -0600, jordon wrote:
>> WiFi Just Works!
>
>> iwm0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Dual Band Wireless AC 8260" rev 0x3a,
>> msi
>
> Uhmm, you probably wanna be running -current with this
On Sat, Nov 12, 2016 at 12:36:54PM +0100, Stefan Sperling wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 08:03:04PM -0600, jordon wrote:
> > WiFi Just Works!
>
> > iwm0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Dual Band Wireless AC 8260" rev 0x3a,
> > msi
>
> Uhmm, you probably wanna be running -current with this one.
I have been running a Thinkpad x220 for some time until it died. I replaced
it with an x230 (my RAM, hard drive and mSATA drive were compatible so I
moved them) and I must say it is a much better machine. Everything
literally works out of the box and the build quality was much better.
I am now
On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 08:03:04PM -0600, jordon wrote:
> WiFi Just Works!
> iwm0 at pci2 dev 0 function 0 "Intel Dual Band Wireless AC 8260" rev 0x3a,
> msi
Uhmm, you probably wanna be running -current with this one.
Then wifi should work even better ;-)
> On Nov 9, 2016, at 11:47 PM, Nathan Koch wrote:
>
> Greetings Fair BSD Wizards,
> I am new to the lists. I am currently shopping for a new Xmas present for
myself and am looking for a laptop that's portable and lightweight. Preferably
fast, cheap (close to free), light, and
Off topic (durability): I've owned a couple X220 ThinkPads now and I
don't disagree with the Cappuccino report - fans are a real weak point
on the ThinkPad - and they break at the worst times - usually when
travelling. Basically, the laptop get squished a little, the fan
stops working, and you
harry666t [harry6...@gmail.com] wrote:
> On 11 November 2016 at 03:25, Brian wrote:
> > Thinkpads are used often by folks wanting to get that penguin OS going also.
>
> Typing this on a Thinkpad X200s, running 6.0, very very happy with it.
I consistently get junk when I
On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 12:20:47PM +0100, Robert wrote:
> On Fri, 11 Nov 2016 10:21:54 +0100
> harry666t wrote:
>
> > On 11 November 2016 at 03:25, Brian wrote:
> > > Thinkpads are used often by folks wanting to get that penguin OS going
> > > also.
On Fri, 11 Nov 2016 10:21:54 +0100
harry666t wrote:
> On 11 November 2016 at 03:25, Brian wrote:
> > Thinkpads are used often by folks wanting to get that penguin OS going
> > also.
+1
I'm using a T400 (14.1"), or when travelling an X61s.
I
On 11 November 2016 at 03:25, Brian wrote:
> Thinkpads are used often by folks wanting to get that penguin OS going also.
Typing this on a Thinkpad X200s, running 6.0, very very happy with it.
Thinkpads are used often by folks wanting to get that penguin OS going also.
Brian
On 11/10/2016 4:34 PM, STeve Andre' wrote:
On 11/10/16 00:47, Nathan Koch wrote:
Greetings Fair BSD Wizards,
I am new to the lists. I am currently shopping for a new Xmas present
for myself and am looking
On 11/10/16 00:47, Nathan Koch wrote:
Greetings Fair BSD Wizards,
I am new to the lists. I am currently shopping for a new Xmas present for
myself and am looking for a laptop that's portable and lightweight. Preferably
fast, cheap (close to free), light, and secure. If you have any
On Wed, Nov 09, 2016 at 11:47:52PM -0600, Nathan Koch wrote:
> Greetings Fair BSD Wizards,
> I am new to the lists. I am currently shopping for a new Xmas present for
> myself and am looking for a laptop that's portable and lightweight.
> Preferably fast, cheap (close to free), light, and
I seem to be doing fine on an old Panasonic Toughbook. They can be
bought quite cheap if you don't mind them being several years old.
Having said that, if you want a laptop that is "close to free", then
expect failures to be "close to free" also.
On Wed, 09 Nov 2016 23:47:52 -0600
Nathan Koch
I'm not sure if anything new is a good choice, particularly because of a lack
of current GPU / WiFi drivers. I usually pick up something about a year or two
old on refurb \ second hand market. Dell's business line (latitude / precision)
have treated me well in the past. Just stick with Intel or
Greetings Fair BSD Wizards,
I am new to the lists. I am currently shopping for a new Xmas present for
myself and am looking for a laptop that's portable and lightweight. Preferably
fast, cheap (close to free), light, and secure. If you have any
recommendations before the stormy winter hits the
I'm still looking for a laptop. Does anybody know of a laptop that
will do at least 1600x___ resolution and have rudimentary power
management (ie., I can pull the AC plug and the laptop does not lock
up)?
Chris
On 5/29/06, Theo de Raadt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/26/06, Christopher Snell
dell inspiron 8100
On 6/14/06, Christopher Snell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm still looking for a laptop. Does anybody know of a laptop that
will do at least 1600x___ resolution and have rudimentary power
management (ie., I can pull the AC plug and the laptop does not lock
up)?
Chris
On
On Tue, Jun 13, 2006 at 05:40:47PM -0600, Christopher Snell wrote:
I'm still looking for a laptop. Does anybody know of a laptop that
will do at least 1600x___ resolution and have rudimentary power
management (ie., I can pull the AC plug and the laptop does not lock
up)?
If you want a big,
On Mon, 2006-05-29 at 17:46 -0600, Theo de Raadt wrote:
Intel is trying to release documentation and open up as fast as they
can to stay in the market. It's almost pathetic, but yes, it is
benefiting us (as it should, and thus, us running on their machines
benefits them, as it should).
In
On 5/26/06, Christopher Snell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It seems like every major laptop manufacturer is locked into Intel
CPU, graphics, WiFi, and sound and that there's no chance in hell that
Intel will release specs on these. What is the future of laptop
support for free Unicies? Will
On 5/26/06, Christopher Snell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
It seems like every major laptop manufacturer is locked into Intel
CPU, graphics, WiFi, and sound and that there's no chance in hell that
Intel will release specs on these. What is the future of laptop
support for free Unicies? Will
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I always run across cheap/free/lying around dell laptops that work great.
The sound works, the wireless might work, and suspend usually works. Right
now I have a dell latitude c400, they're on ebay for $300, the thing weighs
2.5 pounds, it's
On 26/05/06, Christopher Snell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I always run across cheap/free/lying around dell laptops that work great.
The sound works, the wireless might work, and suspend usually works. Right
now I have a dell latitude c400,
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Karsten McMinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
z60t here. as mentioned earlier no support for the intel HD audio, upek bio,
acpi,
atherors 5212, intel wifi, Ricoh 5C552 firewire, 5C822 SD reader or the
915GM.
Needless to say i multiboot
On 5/11/06, Didier Wiroth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I'm currently using a thinkpad 60s
Dual booting between xp and current, yes currently still required ;-)) see below
Here is a short rundown:
a) Performance is nice with bsd kernel, performance is degraded with bsd.mp
b) sound chip
On 11/05/06, rjn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
[...]
On 11/05/06, rjn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I just wanted to thank everyone for their input. Although I won't buy
one immediately, I'll probably get a T43 as they are still
Please try compiling a GENERIC kernel from a -current src tree but
uncommenting the azalia device in the config..
Almost ... ;-)
Azalia causes a panic during the boot process, right after loading the azalia
driver.
Here is some output (rewritten by hand) as the thinkbad X60s has no serial port:
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Why does everyone have to post on here a message that says:
1. Most of the devices on my IBM laptop are completely unsupported
2. I love my IBM laptop!!
hold a ibm and a dell side by side and you'll answer that question. Yes,
I have a
On 5/11/06, Roger Neth Jr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/11/06, Bryan Irvine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels virtualization
software, but not natively due to hang while
On 5/12/06, Samurai Chef [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/11/06, Roger Neth Jr [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/11/06, Bryan Irvine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the macbook pro if you have windows
installed.
I'm
thus rjn spake:
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the macbook pro if you have windows
On 5/11/06, rjn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the macbook pro
On 5/11/06, Nick Guenther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
to be when I first heard about it). If you search the archives you'll
see dmesgs from the new macs.
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels virtualization
On 5/11/06, rjn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm wondering if anybody has experience with the new Lenovo models and
the macbook pro?
A quick search of the archives will show you a number of OpenBSD
developers currently run with the X40 model. That being said, I have a
T60p on order, but I wont
thus rjn spake:
On 5/11/06, Nick Guenther [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
to be when I first heard about it). If you search the archives you'll
see dmesgs from the new macs.
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels
snip
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels virtualization
software, but not natively due to hang while probing USB. Also, I'm
under the opinion that the wireless doesn't work as they use broadcom
adapters
On 5/11/06, Bryan Irvine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
I had checked the archives for misc@, and what I had read indicated
that the Macbook Pro could boot OpenBSD using Parallels virtualization
software, but not natively due to hang while probing USB. Also, I'm
under the opinion that the
Hello,
I'm currently using a thinkpad 60s
Dual booting between xp and current, yes currently still required ;-)) see below
Here is a short rundown:
a) Performance is nice with bsd kernel, performance is degraded with bsd.mp
b) sound chip currently not supported
c) intel wireless lan currently not
On Thursday 11 May 2006 15:21, rjn wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the macbook
Hi RJ.
I would recommend IBM/Lenovo.
OpenBSD 3.9 works out of the box including (but not limited to ;)
suspend, buttons, ... on my IBM X40.
After a hard disk error on my Mac PowerBook (ppc architecture)
I discovered that the support from Mac is really sh*t.
Having a choice between IBM/Lenovo I
As Jason already mentioned, look at the laptop page. I'm not sure
my ThinkPad, an A31p is on that list. They aren't new, but you can
get one in the $700 range now, and they're perhaps the best laptop
IBM made. You can have three disks in it, too. I've had mine for
three years now and the
On Thursday 11 May 2006 15:21, rjn wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Roger Neth Jr
Sent: 11 May 2006 10:52 PM
To: OpenBSD general usage list
Subject: Re: Laptop recommendations
On 5/11/06, Bryan Irvine [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
snip
I had checked the archives
I just wanted to thank everyone for their input. Although I won't buy
one immediately, I'll probably get a T43 as they are still available
if you look.
Maybe support for the ACPI/audio/wifi in the T60 will be better by the
time I'm getting ready to buy so I can have the nice SATA drive and
Karsten McMinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
z60t here. as mentioned earlier no support for the intel HD audio, upek bio,
acpi,
atherors 5212, intel wifi, Ricoh 5C552 firewire, 5C822 SD reader or the
915GM.
Needless to say i multiboot -current with debian. and yes, debian is a pita.
All
that
On Thursday 11 May 2006 19:22, Chris Cappuccio wrote:
Karsten McMinn [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
z60t here. as mentioned earlier no support for the intel HD audio, upek
bio, acpi,
atherors 5212, intel wifi, Ricoh 5C552 firewire, 5C822 SD reader or the
915GM.
Needless to say i multiboot
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pretty much any older dell that I try is very well supported, for what
it's worth.
I have noticed the same thing. I have a Dell Latitude c600 which goes
for only a few hundred on ebay and works very well. Everything works
but the winmodem.
I have had no problems from my 8100 and it has been going for years
(touch wood!)
On 5/12/06, Sam Chill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 5/11/06, Chris Cappuccio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Pretty much any older dell that I try is very well supported, for what
it's worth.
I have noticed the same
rjn wrote:
Hi all,
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (I start college in the fall).
In particular, I'm looking for something OpenBSD compatible. I
considering either a Lenovo Thinkpad or the MacBook Pro. From what
I've seen you can only boot the macbook pro if you have windows
installed.
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