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Dragonbite
November 4th, 2014, 06:54 PM
HP’s latest notebook saves money by ditching Windows for Ubuntu. Is your next notebook Open Source?



Read more: http://www.itpro.co.uk/laptops/23412/hp-ubuntu-laptop-255-g1-review#ixzz3I7hnosSd

257745

HP is offering a low-powered and inexpensive laptop with Ubuntu (12.04) pre-installed. Be great if it can actually sell in significant numbers.

What this means for us, however, is that we need to make sure we are extra helpful to people buying this computer and not quite knowing what they are getting into! If not, then a future headline will point out the rate of return on these devices, and make Ubuntu and Linux look like it is still either a "toy" or for "geeks" only.

Would prefer if it were more powerful (competitive) but taken that Dell and now HP are selling with Ubuntu installed, this may be the start of a very good trend!


Specifications:
Display: 15.6in screen (1,366 x 768)
Processor: 1.48GHz AMD E1-1500
GPU: AMD Radeon HD 7310
Memory: 4GB 1,600MHz DDR3
Storage: 750GB hard disk
Connectivity: 802.11n WiFi; Gigabit Ethernet; Bluetooth 4.0
Ports: 3 x USB 2, 2 x audio, SD card slot, D-SUB
Dimensions: 376 x 247 x 36mm (WxDxH)
Weight: 2.45kg






Read more: http://www.itpro.co.uk/laptops/23412/hp-ubuntu-laptop-255-g1-review#ixzz3I7kANKim

d-cosner
November 6th, 2014, 02:53 AM
I have an HP 655, the specs are almost identical other than mine has 8 GB of RAM and a 320 GB hard drive. Ubuntu runs pretty decent with these specs. Currently I am running Ubuntu Gnome 14.04 x64 on the laptop and it runs just fine.

Edit: I installed preload and TLP on this laptop, it does make a difference.

coldraven
November 6th, 2014, 11:25 AM
I have an HP 655, the specs are almost identical other than mine has 8 GB of RAM and a 320 GB hard drive. Ubuntu runs pretty decent with these specs. Currently I am running Ubuntu Gnome 14.04 x64 on the laptop and it runs just fine.

Edit: I installed preload and TLC on this laptop, it does make a difference.

What is TLC?

My six (or more!) year old HP 6715b has a better screen than that. The downside is the video card which is useless for 3D. I love to update but I want a matte screen that has more than 768 pixels high.

mastablasta
November 6th, 2014, 11:55 AM
My six (or more!) year old HP 6715b has a better screen than that. The downside is the video card which is useless for 3D. I love to update but I want a matte screen that has more than 768 pixels high.

mate FTW! they have them on business models that come preinstalled with SUSE EL here and they work great with Ubuntu. Suse was cool as well but the model we got basically only had demo OS installed. if it had like 2 years support we would leave SUSE on it. but since it didn't, SUSE was switched with Kubuntu which works quite well.

/ADM
November 6th, 2014, 12:05 PM
What this means for us, however, is that we need to make sure we are extra helpful to people buying this computer and not quite knowing what they are getting into! If not, then a future headline will point out the rate of return on these devices, and make Ubuntu and Linux look like it is still either a "toy" or for "geeks" only.



Extra helpful sure, but within reason. It purely depends (at least for me) on their attitude. The usual consumer who is used to bad-mouthing tech support because 'they bought it' won't work here. Considering the OS is free, they are only paying for the hardware.

I'd be extra helpful to people who are appreciative, and considerate. But not to people who simply are arrogant and disrespectful. They can go back to a proprietary OS.

Dragonbite
November 6th, 2014, 02:25 PM
mate FTW! they have them on business models that come preinstalled with SUSE EL here and they work great with Ubuntu. Suse was cool as well but the model we got basically only had demo OS installed. if it had like 2 years support we would leave SUSE on it. but since it didn't, SUSE was switched with Kubuntu which works quite well.

I think there is somewhere where you can change the SUSE repositories to openSUSE and run a kind-of hybrid. OpenSUSE isn't bad at all.

I thought there were Thinkpads with SUSE installed being sold to businesses at one point.

But that is some of the joy I have with Linux... I get a box and so long as it can run Linux I can use it in some way (or even give it to somebody in need)!

mastablasta
November 7th, 2014, 09:06 AM
I think there is somewhere where you can change the SUSE repositories to openSUSE and run a kind-of hybrid. OpenSUSE isn't bad at all.


actually I had OpenSuse with me but the version I had with me had some networking but and some other bug don't remember. since I also had Kubuntu with me and that version didn't have any major bugs that would affect that laptop I just installed Kubuntu. otherwise yes, some versions of opensuse are pretty great.

d-cosner
November 7th, 2014, 10:10 AM
What is TLC?

Oops.... Meant to say TLP.

oldrocker99
November 8th, 2014, 04:21 PM
And there's no Windows tax on a pre-installed Linux machine, which is a big plus.