Date: Mon, 24 Sep 2007 14:01:09 -0500 From: Eric Crist <mnslinky@gmail.com> To: Steve Franks <stevefranks@ieee.org> Cc: User Questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: anyone have a favorite laptop? Message-ID: <538B2BE7-BF1A-46D7-8C75-11D4441527E6@gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <539c60b90709241100y212651cdj7caf3780e5035fb7@mail.gmail.com> References: <539c60b90709241100y212651cdj7caf3780e5035fb7@mail.gmail.com>
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On Sep 24, 2007, at 1:00 PMSep 24, 2007, Steve Franks wrote: > The freebsd laptop page is a nice resource, but it's a bit heavy on > specifics (i.e. I have a laptop I want to install on), not so good > generally (want to buy a laptop). So anyone have realworld advice? > I'm not against something used in the 1GHz+ range. > > <I have a compaq that is %#&*!^$. The pcmcia will not work, the > ndiswrapper for the broadcom panics, etc. So, compaq is right out > (the've always maintained their poor reputation, no?) - so compaq is > out. Seems gateway has an equally bad rap> > > Thanks, > Steve Since it hasn't been mentioned, and it's sorta related, my vote goes toward the Apple Mac line of notebook computers. While they're not running straight FreeBSD, it's pretty darn close. I haven't been restricted in what I can do, and all the ACPI/power management stuff is pretty much guaranteed to work. I find I've got more time to work and play, rather than tweaking my laptop so that it runs right, all the time. Biggest down side is they're expensive compared to other laptops. HTH ----- Eric F Crist Secure Computing Networks
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