The Best Laptop
Nate Williams
nate at yogotech.com
Tue Mar 30 14:52:11 PST 2004
> > Wow, considering that, I had no issues other than having to use
> > OLDKERNEL to get my pcm slots working, my TP600X runs 4.9 perfectly. So
> > much for the above.
>
> I've had three ThinkPads, including a 600E.
I've personally owned 6 different models of them, including a 750, a
755CX, a 600, a 600E, a 600X, a T21, and a T22. All of them worked very
well under FreeBSD. I also supposed 200 of them in the field running
various OS's (including Win95/98/NT/2K) as well as FreeBSD. We did
stress testing on numerous laptops, and time and time again the
Stinkpads won out. They had *FAR* *FAR* *FAR* less problems than any
other laptops I've owned, included the older NEC boxes, various Sony's
(which I consider to be absolute junk), and numerous Toshibas. Note,
the Toshiba's were nice, but weren't nearly as usable as the Thinkpads.
> All of them had problems
> running FreeBSD. The 600E even had problems running Windows 2000 and
> XP, even though it had a sticker on it that said "designed for
> Microsoft Windows". Problems I've experienced include:
>
> - original battery dies, brand new replacement battery also dies
> within months
Never had a problem, although mine spent about 50% of the time in the
docking station. Every laptop I've owned or supported has had the
battery die within 12-18 months, regardless of make/manufacturer.
> - increasingly severe trackpoint drift culminated in the trackpoint
> being completely unusable, keyboard / trackpoint unit was replaced,
> symptoms reappeared months later.
This (unfortunately) is a very common ThinkPad problem, which they
seemed to have finally licked in my T21. I will admit things tended to
become a problem, so I solved this by always using an external
mouse whenever possible (not on planes obviously).
> - BIOS detects trackpoint malfunction during POST, and refuses to
> boot without first running complete systems diagnostic (which takes
> about half an hour and requires a working mouse because the BIOS
> setup / diagnostic utility is graphical rather than text-based)
I've never seen this *ever*
> - laptop suddenly decides to suspend even though AC is plugged in;
> upon resume, runs for 30 seconds before suspending again, etc.
> Once this kicks in, laptop is unusable. The only remedy I found
> was to clear NVRAM in BIOS setup.
Never seen this. I find this interesting as the Thinkpads refuse to go
to sleep when plugged in. (This one of the issues I faced when
debugging the APM code).
> - DOS / Windows utility required to select RS232 instead of IrDA,
> because BIOS setup utility has practically no useful functionality
> besides "select boot device" and "set boot password".
Correct, but this is a one-time affair. There were Linux utilities to
do this, but no-one ever took the time to port them to FreeBSD, as it
was a non-issue for most bocks.
> > And considering the troubles I have had with office based Dell
> > Brickbooks (at 9 pounds or so, they are not really portable) Inspirons
> > and Latitudes, I would not use them if I could do otherwise.
>
> That's disingenious. Both IBM and Dell have a variety of models, some
> designed for performance and others designed for low weight.
Lumping all IBM's as bad because *YOU* had a bad model is no worse. My
experience is quite the opposite of yours, and given the # of FreeBSD
committers who have had good luck with the Thinkpads, I'd say that it
was even out-of-the-orginaary.
Now, as of the Internet meltdown I've not owned a laptop, so my
experiences with newer models is nil. However, if I were to buy another
laptop today, I would *seriously* look at buying an older model T2X
series, since:
1) I don't make the big $$ anymore
2) I know they work well w/FreeBSD
3) I've had great experience with ThinkPads and IBM support
I can't speak to any long-term ownership issues with Dell's, although
what experience I had with them made me love the light weight and
keyboard 'feel' of the Thinkpad which I find vastly superior to any
other laptop I've used.
Then again, Warner like's his Sony, and I wouldnt' touch one with a
ten-foot pole.
Nate
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