Spyke
linux·Linuxbyparallax

Looking for a "couch laptop"

I'm in the market for a Linux friendly ultralight laptop to check web apps and run terminal, nothing fancier then that. Do any cheap systems exits these days? I was looking at a chrome book but apparently the mediatek chip doesn't play nicely with FOSS.

Any thoughts?

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lemmy.ml

Ex-corporate refurbished laptop from the last 3 or 4 years for about $300 tops is perfect for this.

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lemmy.world

Can confirm, I use an old HP elitebook from work. Battery life is great, beats my wives new lenovo. More than powerful enough to browse the web and play in the terminal. Also only gets hot if I run a game on it; I wouldnt advise that though.

7

Can confirm, bought a Dell latitude 4790 which is a corporate machine refurbished for $270. It's super powerful for the price, runs Fedora perfectly.

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programming.dev

I have a second-hand Thinkpad T480s that I love, I bought it for 250$ on ebay and replaced its battery because it was fried (+40$). I use it for school and it works flawlessly, around 8h of battery life in a well-configured OpenSUSE Tumbleweed. According to the specs sheet it shouldn't be, but for some reason it is noticeably lighter than a friend of mine's MacBook Air 2021.

What I really love about it is the ThinkDock Ultra (iirc 30$ on ebay), which lets me place the laptop on my table, and by just sliding a piece of plastic, it connects all of my peripherals in a second. I love this laptop so much that I'll use it until it dies so hard that it can't be fixed at all.

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lemy.lol

It's not the thinnest thing ever, but I find my old ThinkPad X230 very light and easy to use for extended periods on my lap

10

I bought a used Lenovo ThinkPad X240 Laptop i5 | 8GB RAM | 500GB HDD | for 50$ as a couch laptop to run Linux / Python code. I can browse the internet and it’s light.

10

The pinebooks are pretty inexpensive. I can't speak to quality or usability though

9

When you say "couch" my first thought is a recent-ish Celeron or Pentium Silver fanless laptop. Performance akin to a Core 2 Duo but no fan to get blocked sitting on the couch. Like the Latitude 3210(?)

Laptops that appeal to me are often bottom breathers so it's one thing I miss from my old MB Air.

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My couch laptop is an i5-5200u and it does great until you get more than 2 heavy browser tabs open.

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feddit.de

Any chromebook that supports Coreboot. Absolutely unrepairable and very low storage, but good Linux support and coreboot!

mrchromebox.tech/devices

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13617reply
lemmy.world

But be aware a ton of features that would work on ChromeOS don't work, I've done this to 4 and all have separate problems

3

Very interesting! I had an Acer Chromebook I couldnt even open up, so I got rid of it as fast as possible.

Could you share experiences?

  • keyboard layouts, missing buttons
  • what features are missing?
  • anything else thats good to know?
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Corrodedreply
leminal.space

What about something like the Thinkpad X201? It's not ultralight but it is quite small.

Other than that I'd probably say a Chromebook with a Linux install. Second hand they are quite cheap and can likely do what you are after. A lot of them have passive cooling which is nice for a couch device. I was able to install libreboot on my C201P quite easily and now it just runs a traditional Linux install

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n2burnsreply
lemmy.ca

I'm writing this on my x201 on my couch. I love it, but it's not a great couch laptop. It's kind of heavy, runs hot, and has poor battery life vs more-recent comparables.

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Yeah the heat would be what would make me hesistate to use it as a couch laptop but if OP wants something cheap I would say it's an okay option

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I used to have X230 as a daily driver for laptop (I got separate desktop) and it's a really nice machine for it's size. Only the display is a bit lacking by todays standards as it's only 1368x768, but for 150€ (give or take) it's not too bad.

3

I prefer the T480 series (imo Thinkpad went downhill from there onwards). The non-s is a great off-road laptop, but for what OP is asking, the T480s seems like a more sensible choice.

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I bought a refurbished dall latitude 7490 for like 270$. For the price it's a powerful machine, 16gb ram and i7 processor. Installed fedora on it and I'm in love with it. For the price it puts out the power I need for software development.

6

As others have mentioned, secondhand laptops and surplus business laptops are very affordable and probably better value for the money than a chromebook. My understanding is that drivers for things like fingerprint sensors, SD card readers, or oddball Wi-Fi chipsets can be issues to watch out for. But personally I don't care about the fingerprint sensor and only the Wi-Fi would be a major issue to me.

A couple years ago now I picked up a used Acer Swift with 8th gen intel and a dent in the back lid for something like $200 to use as my "throw in a backpack for travel" laptop, and it has been working great. In retrospect, I would have looked for something with 16GB of RAM or upgradeable RAM (8GB soldered to the motherboard, ugh), but aside from that minor gripe it has been a good experience.

5

What price bracket are you looking at? The two laptops that I normally use in that situation is a used Thinkpad X1 Carbon I got on eBay, and a HP Dev One that works pretty well for that.

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parallaxreply
local106.com

I am fine with refurbished but ideally looking for around 13" and under a couple hundred bucks

1

The Thinkpad link that was shared below looks pretty nice, they tend to be fairly cheap and easy to get replacement batteries and parts. There's a lot available in that $150 to $200 bracket on eBay. Edit: I just saw it's 14", so a bit bigger than what you wanted. You can filter by screen size and price on eBay to give you an idea of what you can get. You may need a new battery depending on the age, so keep that in mind.

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If it was going to be my daily drive. They are just too expensive to have as a system I can use while sitting with the family.

11

I have a framework and love it but it's probably not the best option for this. It's kinda overkill and they can get a bit hot and loud. More of a desk laptop than a lap laptop IMHO. Also depends on how long you need the battery to last but this is reportedly better in the newer models.

1

The ultimate couch laptop will be an M1 MacBook Air as it has no fans and a suped up phone chip so it doesn't heat. It also has amazing battery life... But it's still pretty expensive and it cannot be repaired. Otherwise old MacBooks should be pretty good because most of the Intel models used relatively low end chips because their thermal design was so limited

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Afaik the M1Air is fully functional for this use case. I think only small things like the fingerprint sensor and deeper processor features are missing

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I recentry tried an M2 Air and was just amazed how lightweight it was.

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lemm.ee

When you say webapps, may I ask what method you prefer for using PWAs on Linux? Do you install them as apps? If so, how?

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lemy.lol

I use Brave pretty much just for that purpose, while I use Firefox to browse everything else.
There is Firefox PWA, but it feels like such a shitty hack (don't get me wrong, it's not badly made, but they're forced by the circumstances to make a setup process that is one big headache) that I'd rather have a browser that has official and solid support and it also doubles as my browser to test web content on Blink, so it's a win-win for me

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Petter1reply
lemm.ee

Yea, I tried with Firefox PWA, but as you have told, it was not usable for me. Most PITA was, that I had to install my plugins on any PWA again and again.. I would love using a browser which is not chromium based but has nice PWA features.

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lemy.lol

Maybe you can try GNOME Web if you don't like Chromium, it should have them too, not sure how good the implementation is, though

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Petter1reply
lemm.ee

It seems to work as I want 😃 thank you!

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Pantherinareply
feddit.de

Problem is that Webapps require a very unhardened browser. Complete caching, cookies saved, serviceworkers in the background, so if Firefox got the feature hardening would break it

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lemy.lol

Isn't that kind of the point though? I'd appreciate the option, but I don't know how usable actual web apps would be without access to those things

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Yes of course. Thats why support would totally be possible, but it needs to be a seperate unhardened firefox profile. Then all good.

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ChromiumOS would be better. But you can flash coreboot on lots of Chromebooks and run real Linux on them

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