
- KEYCASTR LINUX PRO
- KEYCASTR LINUX PC
Waiting: Hold on long enough, and Apple just might get their shit together. At the time of writing, the oldest refurbished laptops that Apple sells now are 2017 models. You could buy one of these - and I did exactly that in 2017 I’m still using it now - and hope that Apple unfucks their laptop line by the time the refurbished one dies. I love this thing.īuying refurbished: Apple used to sell refurbished 2015 MacBook Pros (the last "good" Apple laptops).
KEYCASTR LINUX PC
basically silent) PC with a small form factor, powerful specs, reasonable pricing, easy access to internals, and beautiful design that leverages heat pipes to transport heat to the outside of the case (which can get quite hot). My favorite machine out there right now is the Compulab Airtop3 there’s a great video review here and pricing information is here, but the TL DR is that this is a passively cooled (ie. I’m not even wedded to the idea of this Linux box being a laptop (portability is overrated, especially if you keep your Apple laptop around for those times when you need something on the go).
KEYCASTR LINUX PRO
The System76 Oryx Pro looks insanely powerful, and it comes with Linux installed by default (it also has a smaller, "sexier" sibling in the form of the Galago Pro, which doesn’t have the unnecessary number pad nor the ridiculously off-center trackpad). It also departs from the classic "inverted-T" cluster for the cursor keys. The new keyboard is infamously prone to failure but basically can’t be repaired (you have to replace the whole top plate, apparently). Apple is going nowhere fast with its hardware, with the last MacBook Pros being an insane cluster fuck of dongles, Touch Bars and no compelling performance or capacity upgrades in exchange for the lost convenience: I’d much rather have a "PC" laptop, even an ugly one, with a bunch of ports, an SD card slot, a bunch of RAM, and no ridiculous Touch Bar. iTerm is so slow, and it appears that macOS’s own graphics APIs are the bottleneck this is fine on the laptop screen, but a real killer when plugged into a 4K external display. Or the way Sierra broke Karabiner, which I utterly rely on. (System Integrity Protection) - laudable though it may be from a security perspective - basically broke all RubyGem installs by default. Apple has a penchant for breaking things in unexpected and arbitrary ways. Can’t sync an iPhone with Linux, so would ( gasp!) have to switch to Android. Need to find replacements for indispensible software, and go without "dispensible-but-preferred" software. You can get some very powerful hardware (with actual ports and a quality keyboard) on the Linux side at a reasonable price.
I had a mutt-based email set-up that I was pretty happy with, and could easily resuscitate it failing that, I’m relatively satisfied with the Gmail web interface.I spend most of my working life in Chrome and the Terminal.Is this viable?Īt its core, this may be realistic because: Here are some notes made while thinking through the topic. I’ve revisited the topic on multiple occasions. Around May 2017 I started seriously thinking of switching to Linux for my next machine.