Depends on what formfactor you're after. There should be plenty of options if 
you'll consider secondhand/refurbished.

The Thinkpad X series is good. My X220 is still chugging along. I have a 
Samsung Chromebook that I bought to run Arm Linux on, but it was never 
fantastic. When my Pi-Top arrives, I'll let you know how it is, but I'm 
guessing Xubuntu should run well enough.

Hmm, more options than answers, I'm afraid. Older MacBooks might also be worth 
a look, but storage could be an issue with smaller SSDs.

T

> On 22 Sep 2015, at 20:36, Simon Greenwood <sfgreenw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On 22 September 2015 at 19:49, Steve Mynott <steve.myn...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Anyone any recommendations for very cheap laptops (ideally netbook
>> like form factor) with good linux support?
>> 
>> I assume netbooks themselves are pretty dead (which is a pity since
>> some had decent keyboards).
>> 
>> Has anyone found anything similar?  I suppose a chromebook running the
>> libfakeroot linux might be the closest although most of them have very
>> restricted SSD space.
>> 
>> Any suggestions?
>> 
>> --
>> 4096R/EA75174B Steve Mynott <steve.myn...@gmail.com>
>> 
>> --
> 
> Some of the Windows with Bing laptops might be worth a punt, as far as I can 
> see they're just regular laptops with what used to be known as Windows Home 
> on them and there a few netbook factor models around.
> 
> s/ 
> -- 
> Twitter: @sfgreenwood
> "TBA are particularly glib"
> -- 
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> https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk
> https://wiki.ubuntu.com/UKTeam/
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