justarandomname 2 hours ago

My first laptop back in 2005ish or so was a Dell Latitude. Ran XP until Vista came out and I switch to Linux which it ran for a couple years until it was stolen from my car. I recall unimaginable pain and suffering due to wifi, which, IIRC, I side-stepped by buying replacing the stock Broadcom card with an Atheros card and I'm certain is not nearly much of an issue as it used to be.

mort96 2 hours ago

I've had two Dell XPS laptops (a 13" 2015 model and a 15" 2-in-1 2018 model). Both had significant touchpad issues: not sure if that's a driver thing or a hardware thing, but both would sometimes act as if there was a phantom touch somewhere on the trackpad which messed with my actual input. One of them had a keyboard where key caps of frequently used keys (super, shift, ctrl) would split in two after a ~year of use; this was not fixed under warranty, I paid out of pocket after a year of ownership, another year later it happened again.

After those two Dell XPS laptops, I got a MacBook Pro 2021 with an M1 Pro instead of getting the keyboard fixed again. No issues. Linux support isn't great, but at least macOS is a relatively competent UNIX so it's fine.

I might consider another non-Mac laptop in the future. But it's not gonna be a Dell.

  • debo_ 2 hours ago

    I think I may have the same 2015 13" model you are describing. Which distro were you running out of curiosity?

    • mort96 2 hours ago

      Mostly Arch Linux at the time, though I've had Elementary OS on it as well. I used to run i3 (and eventually Sway) on it, which worked well since I could have a keyboard-centric workflow and not rely o bc the trackpad.

      • debo_ 2 hours ago

        Huh. I wonder if they were both hardware issues. I've run arch on my laptop with no issues.

  • fluidcruft an hour ago

    I have had many Dells that have been great with FreeBSD and with Linux. You do have to do your research though.

    Frankly, I wouldn't expect any touchscreen to work with Linux. That's not a Dell issue though.

    • Fluorescence 7 minutes ago

      The XPS I bought in 2018 has a Wacom digitiser for touch/pen and I believe those are very well supported.

      A clean install of Ubuntu and the touchscreen and all pen features worked perfectly and never had a hiccup since.

    • mort96 an hour ago

      Interestingly, the touch screen of the 2-in-1 worked really well! I often relied on the touch screen to do light web browsing when the trackpad was acting up.

YorickPeterse an hour ago

I did briefly look into the XPS series but it seems this series isn't really a thing anymore? I also found a lot of comments describing recurring issues with the trackpad (or was it the keyboard? I can't remember). Basically it seemed like too much of a gamble.

  • debo_ 20 minutes ago

    I'm not a massive fan of the hardware or anything, but most Dell laptops (including this premium one I linked) are tested to work with Ubuntu. If you're ok to use an Ubuntu-derivative as your distro, you should almost always have that as an option. Much like the Framework, it should be easily returnable if you have an issue.

DetectDefect 21 minutes ago

How is Dell's firmware security story?

  • debo_ 19 minutes ago

    I can't think of many things I care less about than firmware security, so I am personally not sure.

varispeed 2 hours ago

Please don't trigger my Dell PTSD. This is garbage tier hardware designed to harass employees.

  • The_President 2 hours ago

    Nothing says quality like a display option with a picture comparable to a cheap portable DVD player from 2007.

    • timcobb 17 minutes ago

      This is a good call.

      I wonder what this means:

      > featuring up to 80W of performance