>Is that an non-cucked modular open source right-to-repair friendly laptop?>Ahhhhhh niggerman save me, I need my hardware to be locked down non-repairable planned obsoletion macslop!Wtf, why is /g/ like this when it comes to this specific brand?
>>106450216Don't need any more pajeet "contributions." I've had enough.
>>106450216went from the 11th gen intel i7 to the mid range amd ai 300 series they offer on the 13 inch. battery was the same until i switched from tlp to power profiles daemon. gained about an average of 1.5-2 hours battery life. the i7 made it an OK laptop experience. the new amd makes it my favorite laptop.
you can buy a refurbed office laptop off Amazon for less than $100 and put linux on it, this is just consooooomer slop>>106450347this nigger's already on his second one and the first one didn't even have good enough battery life for him.
>>106450216>pajeet ceo>muh repair>somewhat "upgrades" cost more than buying a new laptop with similar specs
>>106450376i still use the mainboard of the i7. its now a jellyfin server. the first gen intels had a bad bios design where the bios battery didnt charge from ac power or battery. so if it shut down after the bios battery died you had to open it up and reset the bios to turn it on. there was a wire mod available for it. but i decided to upgrade instead. was an easy upgrade, like 5 screws. its also one of the small handful of amd laptops where they dont require mediatek wifi modules, so i can use a much more reliable intel wifi card.
>>106450376This, nothing can beat the used business laptop. Framework is nicer than other slop for sure, but still built for consumer standards (designed to shit itself)
>>106450216>haha how about you pay double the market rate for really mediocre hardware so that you can replace a fucking usb port of it breaksJust buy a stinkpad
I guess it's neat but I don't like in particular the "extreme" modularity. I don't need to set my keyboard specifically to be centered or set to the left-right, or be able to remove it in 2 seconds because it's held with magents. I want to be able to unscrew if it breaks. Older thnkpads had the right approach. All the parts could be bought and swapped with a screw driver, we didn't need a billion "port modules" because it came with all the ports you possibly could need. The ultrabay was more useful in terms of modularity (disk, ODD, battery, fan?) than whatever these usb-c adapters are.I don't want lego computer held with magnets, i want a T420s with modern specs.