Between this and the Framework 16, the future of moddable laptops is looking sweet
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
I'm all here for it!
@rmcdudmk212 Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah it is. 🎉
@foldionepapyrus3441 Жыл бұрын
We can hope, and I really do . But still time for them both to fizzle out, especially if they can't manage to stay close enough in performance to make the price stomach able. Though with just how open the MNT has been and it being chunkier for more physical volume to work with it shouldn't be hard to create new modules to fit.
@rayproductionsbackupchanne3862 Жыл бұрын
Too bad both are way outside of financial sense..
@jmr Жыл бұрын
I hope you're right. I'm sick of all the unnecessary e-waste. I also like to hack my stuff. 😂
@programmeroftheeve Жыл бұрын
This harks to the old days of computers being sold as kits and just about everything was user modifiable. Very cool. Wish I had the funds for something like this.
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
Back when the computer came in parts and you had to solder it yourself :D
@Skeleton-in-boots Жыл бұрын
Жаль что ты не работаешь (нет)
@magicsforce Жыл бұрын
The more people by this and frameworks laptops the more the prices with go down.
@AQHackAQ Жыл бұрын
Huh? Like any custom PC build today? Wtf is even this comment...
@nicholash8021 Жыл бұрын
@@AQHackAQI think he's referring to laptops, back when we could swap out CD-ROM drive bays for extra battery storage in the same slot, swappable hard-drive bays, panels to reach ram modules, and a standardized slot (forgot the name) where you could insert a wifi card, network plug, or various other modules. These are all gone because the name of the game became thin & light, and manufacturers had to come up with proprietary ways to beat their competition.
@kenneth_romero Жыл бұрын
This looks like such a great machine for firmware and hardware students. Imagine how easily and all the open resources you could use to work on these stuff. It's like we're going full circle back to the golden age of computing. Where the hardware was ours when we bought it.
@gosimons6 ай бұрын
Its not full circle the hardware was never ours, closed companies making hardware for a long time, the amount of backdoors we do not know about is insane, even a simple piece of hardware such as a printer would make microdots to determine location for counterfeit reasons in the US.
@pacocarrion786921 күн бұрын
@@gosimons I think @kenneth_romero is talking about the 80's, after Pentium 4 you are absoluty right (backdoors everywhere)
@c0d1ngclips25 Жыл бұрын
the fact that it comes with a handbook that actually explains every part is amazing
@41chemist19 Жыл бұрын
This is awesome. It takes the repairability a step farther than even Framework but with some pretty significant compromises.
@Gusto20000 Жыл бұрын
Awesome? Have you tried using rpi as a daily driver? Are you ok?
@sayorancode Жыл бұрын
@@Gusto20000 i have used a rpi as daily driver for 2 years , it is not too bad to watch youtube on (assuming you do not need 4k ) and some opensource games like minetest and supertuxkart run fine (STK just needs some settings turned down) the banana pi 4 is faster than the pi 4 which i was using so it should be fine for a laptop (and you can probably replace it with a more powerful SOC later in time )
@41chemist19 Жыл бұрын
@@Gusto20000 90% of what I do can be done with a browser and an office suite. I probably wouldn't get rid of my other laptops / desktops when using this, but the average person doesn't need a high spec machine, and when I need one I'll have one.
@fakecubed Жыл бұрын
@@Gusto20000 Most people can daily drive tech from 20 years ago no problem. A Raspberry Pi is more than enough for many. For games, and Blender, I have a high end desktop. I don't know anyone in real life who does anything remotely close to what I do with Blender. I only know a handful of people who are playing demanding games. Heck, look at Steam's hardware surveys and look at what games people are actually playing. Nearly everybody is just using web-based apps and most people only watch videos on their phones these days.
@clementpoon120 Жыл бұрын
to be honest you might as well just buikd your own laptop from scratch considering how overpriced this is
@nathanielsmith5566 Жыл бұрын
Finally! Someone who sees the term 'hacking' as not just for malicious intent. It's all about figuring out how something works and if you can't get it to work to work around it.
@Fractal_32 Жыл бұрын
Cracking is typically what people think of when they hear hacking instead of the historical context where hacker was “a complimentary description for a particularly brilliant programmer or technical expert.”
@autohmae Жыл бұрын
@@Fractal_32 I always liked the description of hacking: making a system do things it was never intended to do. 🙂
@HappyBeezerStudios Жыл бұрын
My personal biggest "hack" was getting an LGA771 CPU running on a LGA775 board. Which included hardware mods to make it fit and work in the socket and software mods which included adding the microcode into the BIOS.
@Thalanox Жыл бұрын
@@autohmae It reminds me of one of the best hackers I know in fiction, Red Green. _"Any tool can be the right tool."_
@nichtgestalt Жыл бұрын
The people making these laptops also offer an open mechanical keyboard, the same you can see on this machine. So if you wanna support this company without committing too much maybe this is an option. Also, thank you Jeff for doing this review. I got excited as soon as I've seen your post on Mastodon.
@lenninlc Жыл бұрын
Same ! Great video 🎉
@ganeshbachkar8165 Жыл бұрын
This laptop madel and name
@chainq68k Жыл бұрын
I know the creator of this thing personally. It's an extremely small team, and they put their love, heart and soul into it. I love what they do, and I'm always tempted to buy one, but I'm too lazy, and have a too wide interest (retro-things) to just stuck to ARM Linux hacking. Maybe I'll get the slim down version though, when it's out. We'll see.
@settlece Жыл бұрын
Hats off to them it's a shame the focus on what this laptop really represented was not really maximised and kept referring back to this pre packaged products that had a completely different design and customer because the same could have been said about apple product for instance, I could have said unlike this laptop the MacBook Air cannot be opened without without melting the glue etc, you can't put memory in it, there's no open source the Mac book air lacks flexibility 2 completely change out what hardware you want and I would have said that was an unfair comparison if the MacBook Air was being reviewed.
@akashp01 Жыл бұрын
whats the use of being so repairable if the soc is going to get useless in 2-3 years, another way of planned obsolescence. These crappy chips are of no use. Real computers have decent capable cpus.
@LiquidPL Жыл бұрын
then you put in a newer soc module, they're replaceable after all besides, it's hardly useless if it still can run things. not everybody needs the fastest top of the line cpu
@settlece Жыл бұрын
Apple's been selling last Gen tech for years at the price of new tech ah you just answered exactly why you can replace the parts on it so conveniently and why apple don't let you do that I don't think you quite understand what this product is. This isn't bleeding edge technology and shouldn't be compared to it The concept is more the thing here and how the hardware is used and how the user has the freedom to make it their own@@akashp01
@BahhBahhBrownSheep Жыл бұрын
@@akashp01you’re not the brightest, are you?
@WeirdTippy Жыл бұрын
Such a cool idea to power a laptop through 18650s and have modular a swappable soc. I hope one day laptops become more like this with very easy to swap parts similar to that of the framework
@justincarter7954 Жыл бұрын
laptop batteries were one of the primary reasons that 18650 cells were invented. My decade old dell laptop uses them. I actually replaced one of the cells a couple years ago. Laptops stopped using them because laptop designers started going thinner and thinner and pouch cells just made more sense.
@SaitoGray Жыл бұрын
@@justincarter7954 I used to disassemble old laptops battery to keep the cell. Made me a pretty nice Ebike battery.
@colbyboucher639111 ай бұрын
Seriously. Thr fact that it's thick enough to house those things is a feature imo
@TravisBHartwell Жыл бұрын
I ordered their MNT Pocket Reform on Crowd Supply. I'm excited for the mini version of this.
@marksfolly123 Жыл бұрын
Thinnness isn't a feature, it's a bug. Modern laptops are overly thin, but are often non-serviceable due to it. This project looks pretty neat, but tbh I'm more excited for Linux based modular open phones and smaller devices than I am this. Specs really make it not very competitive with older ThinkPad models, which are also quite moldable and tough.
@vinson3725 Жыл бұрын
Finally, the first actually good comment i've seen in this section. A thicker chassis makes for better cooling specs and better sound implementation bc of all the space.
@zakofrx Жыл бұрын
Some thing need to be small but we are making to many things small that dont need to be.. Like trying to make phones thinner and thinner while removing things people use and cutting down on battery life..
@eDoc2020 Жыл бұрын
I work on plenty of modern laptops and the thinness doesn't make them non-serviceable. Instead it makes them more fragile.
@colbyboucher639111 ай бұрын
Old ThinkPads use proprietary batteries that you might not be able to replace. You can find them online but they've all been sitting around for many years at this point so even if you buy a "new" one it won't actually be new.
@marksfolly12311 ай бұрын
That sounds right. So far I've been able to buy suitable "new" thinkpad batteries. Unfortunately I think you'll run into similar problems with all other older electronics. @@colbyboucher6391
@ignem432 Жыл бұрын
While I think this is a step in the right direction and we need more repairable and open source laptops, the price kind of kills it for me. I have a similiar setup, using a foldable portable display, a raspberry pi 4/5, together with mouse and keyboard in suitcase, powered by a powerbank. For extra connectivity I modded a standard switch to operate on usb power and added a router. That whole setup is less than 300€, it's not pretty or extremely practical by any means, but it get's the job done just as well, costing much less than this solution. I know that the manufacturer operates on small margins with such customised high quality setups, but with this price point, I doubt it will see much adoption. I might consider picking one up in 3 to 5 years, hopefully then the hardware will match the price a bit more :)
@darth_dan8886 Жыл бұрын
Cyberdeck makers are gonna have a field day with this one~ BTW, love the touch with that extra LCD in the bootloader. No overreliance on the big display's ability to function.
@DigitalJedi Жыл бұрын
I could see this being useful as a portable dev platform for these ARM SoCs. It seems to have just about every kind of I/O you'd want to test with your software with. That's a super niche use case, but one I think this suits really well. I'm really happy to see these guys contributing to more open-source hardware. I'd love to see an x86 compute module in the future. Something like an Intel N50 or N100 would be sick to slot in to one of these sorts of things.
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
Yeah, there's room enough for an Intel or AMD chip, too! Cooling would need to be passive though.
@DigitalJedi Жыл бұрын
@JeffGeerling with the chassis volume I recon a fairly large passive heatsink would be possible if there's no way to mount a fan. Even then something like an N100 would be very easy to cool since I've rarely seen mine exceed 12W.
@stacksmasherninja7266 Жыл бұрын
As a vim user, I completely approve mapping capslock to escape lol
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
vim > emacs
@l3gacyb3ta21 Жыл бұрын
lisp will destroy you all /lh
@jimktrains0 Жыл бұрын
I map capslock to ctrl and use ^[ as escape. Ctrl is more useful in more applications and the ^[ isn't bad for me.
@whiskeytuesday Жыл бұрын
@@jimktrains0 This is the way
@moarjank Жыл бұрын
Honestly don't know how I've lived for so many years without that mapping... it seems like too much effort lol. I got to spend time working on neovim DAP - > LSP integration sometime again....
@dominick253 Жыл бұрын
You show up to the meeting with this bad boy, you're going to be promoted in no time! Yes new video in the new studio. Worth the wait!
@ShinyTechThings Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of working in an IBM AS/400 back in the day with the small LCD panel and thick manual and it's *a process* to turn it on or off.
@jjjacer Жыл бұрын
also the boot times, i knocked out power to one back in the early 2000s and had to wait till it booted up to go home, about 3hrs later
@xero110 Жыл бұрын
This shows how much people want ARM computers. I would kill for a powerful ARM laptop with Linux. 8 High-end cores, 16/32GB RAM, NVMe, and being open like this project would be my dream machine.
@mskiptr Жыл бұрын
MacBooks check out every box besides _open_ btw (what's surprising, in some areas they are more open than all modern Intel/AMD machines)
@xero110 Жыл бұрын
@@mskiptr The never ending need to reverse engineer drivers is why I haven't gotten an M* MacBook. It would be great if Apple made drivers available for Linux, I'd even be OK with closed source drivers. I also don't like that Asahi is the only option.
@raisofahri5797 Жыл бұрын
@@xero110sadly it's apple yeah not gonna happen
@mskiptr Жыл бұрын
@@xero110 Apple doesn't care about Linux. But since for some reason (thank God) they put "a user-controllable bootloader" in their requirements, have delivered on that part and are sticking to this policy, both Linux and OpenBSD are now options. Asahi is just a project to write these drivers for Linux. Yes, it requires reverse-engineering (because again, Apple doesn't care), but that extra effort it required makes these drivers some of the most polished ones out there. [1/2], because YT straight up removed my reply the first time I posted it
@mskiptr Жыл бұрын
@@xero110 But it's not really true that Asahi is the only option. You can go with Fedora (the current officially endorsed distro), NixOS, Debian, Ubuntu, Gentoo, Alpine and more. The goal of the Asahi project is to make any ARM64 distro work - by submitting all of the drivers upstream and getting them integrated into mainline Linux. [2/2]
@General-Failure Жыл бұрын
Whether or not I would ever buy this kind of "hackable" notebook myself, I applaud the makers for their hard work and for the additional choice they provide for end users. This, in itself, is a great achievement in my book. Respect.
@FinnHarrison-t5b21 күн бұрын
more of a dictionary then a notebook
@ScottGrammer Жыл бұрын
An SMT fuse... IN A SOCKET! Now that's some innovation.
@aspzx Жыл бұрын
I was struggling to see who would buy this until I saw the custom builds other people have made. There isn't really any other machine that you can build your own custom mechanical keyboard in and a lot of people are very particular about their keyboards so it's great to have a platform that allows you to build one into a laptop.
@NomDayPloom Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the tight review! That this exists at all gives some hope for open platforms and open hardware. ❤🎉❤
@thehorsefromhorsinabout Жыл бұрын
I never realized this before now but I've always wanted a clear laptop.
@massimocavalleri6823 Жыл бұрын
Always interesting products. Thanks for another beautiful video! I see you from Italy
@MarcoGPUtuber Жыл бұрын
This channel was made to be WATCHED!
@owlmostdead9492 Жыл бұрын
I feel like if properly reengineered, you could make this much more compact and elegant. Just like the framework design, could need some reengineering.
@LightTheUnicorn Жыл бұрын
It doesn't quite have the performance I'd need in current form(s) - but gosh you can really tell a lot of work and love goes into MNT's projects. Really love and all about what they're doing, and can't wait to see what else they come out with. Maybe one day I'll be picking one up!
@velho6298 Жыл бұрын
That operators manual is epic
@valdisgerasymiak1403 Жыл бұрын
Few years ago I wanted to do laptop like this myself. It's great to see such projects.
@ff1077Ай бұрын
Now would be the time to try this out with the CM5 and see how well it does and what it misses. Also hope they allow you to be able to swap out between a DC jack and USB-PD jack.
@aleksandersats9577 Жыл бұрын
Finally a laptop where you can actually change the battery cells. Every single other laptop I have come across has a battery with a BMS built into the battery, and if you attempt to replace the cells, the BMS will literally brick itself making it impossible to replace cells.. Anti repair at it's finest.
@PhaQ2 Жыл бұрын
It's smart that they provide a PSU that is well above the machines consumption abilities. If it only supplied 48 watts, it would burn up quickly when the machine is demanding everything the PSU can provide.
@DolezalPetr Жыл бұрын
I love how these modular super upgradable laptops and other devices are becoming more and more popular, that is the way future should look like
@fakecubed Жыл бұрын
Looking forward to a RISC-V thing like this. Seems inevitable at this point. Probably sooner than we expect.
@moarjank Жыл бұрын
I'm honestly surpised I haven't seen a compute module RISC-V board yet. Perhaps I'm just not paying enough attention.
@moarjank Жыл бұрын
Actually, a bit of research reveals the "RISC-V ARVSOM System-on-Module". Just buy one of those, and with any luck it'll just be plug & play. (you'll likely need luck though - not all linux drivers for accessories work with the RISC-V architecture yet)
@edolg9 Жыл бұрын
Why RISC-V? What's wrong with ARM?
@mjetektman9313 Жыл бұрын
@@edolg9RISC-V is truly open source, and also it's an interesting architecture
@fakecubed Жыл бұрын
@@moarjank there’s one by Milk-V.
@eldibs Жыл бұрын
I'm completely okay with a laptop being that thick. I'd much rather have it thicker and repairable/upgradeable any day of the week. I'm on the larger size myself, so the extra weight is negligible to me.
@galvanizeddreamer2051 Жыл бұрын
It's not like smaller or thinner laptops are much lighter, from what I've run into. The metal case likely helps for this, but thin plastic laptops (not a netbook) I have used have always been heavy enough to flex and sag if held from one corner.
@gnuPirate11 ай бұрын
Almost perfect. Needs trackpoint rather than trackball, so I don't have to lift my fingers off keyboard when I need mouse.
@masterluu8 Жыл бұрын
This gives me flashbacks to the Novena Open Laptop from 10 years ago. Though that one came with a built-in FPGA and MyriadRF SDR, since it was created by hardware hacker Bunnie. Came with a quad core and 4GB of RAM as well and all firmware was open source.
@autohmae Жыл бұрын
Was thinking the same thing !
@TheMonthlyJack Жыл бұрын
The one in a folder was my favorite laptop design.
@Hossimo Жыл бұрын
Love the new studio but im still hearing a slight echo but it looks great!
@bhasselgren Жыл бұрын
I love what MNT is doing. I would really like them sending you a Reform Pocket as well.
@Afsafs123 Жыл бұрын
I was interested up until the price. I'm sure this is great for someone, but I'm clearly not the target audience. Still, maybe someday when the price drops, this would be neat!
@jameshodgetts7541 Жыл бұрын
Agreed! 3-4-500 dollars, depending on spec and features, count me in. perhaps if they did a base model without the SSD and a cheaper non mech keyboard and such like, and could upgrade as time goes on. If I had over a grand to spend on a laptop, you bet its a daily driver and not a hacking toy like this.
@BenReese Жыл бұрын
It looks like most of the thickness is a battery constraint. If they could swap in some standard array of flat-pack batteries - like something from mini drones maybe, I think it could get a little thinner. Or perhaps there's a popular laptop battery that will be in production for another 20 years they could borrow. Those 18650s are ubiquitous though.
@maximusdarja9 ай бұрын
Man, I feel old. I remember when this sort of hardware was Radio Shacks jam.
@otter-pro Жыл бұрын
I'd like to also see the possibility of multiple compute modules in this laptop form, so that it can be like a cluster in a laptop, which would make it a unique value proposition.
@ryandailey1496 Жыл бұрын
I'd also like to see a switch inside the case for disconnecting the battery, given disconnecting the battery is the first thing you do every time when opening it up. Those connectors are chonky, fragile and require more force that I would like to disconnect, and I've ripped one off a motherboard before.
@Genesis8934 Жыл бұрын
Not for me, but it's neat for the future innovation. edit: It does look like the main thickness is for the batteries though, so some improvement available there.
@cheweh842 Жыл бұрын
the thickest part under the hood is actually the trackball assembly, if you have that installed. the touchpad is thin, though.
@eDoc2020 Жыл бұрын
It's the batteries combined with the mechanical keyboard. Plenty of laptops with 18650s aren't noticeable thicker than an inch.
@smorrow11 ай бұрын
@@eDoc2020 ThinkPads, at least, with cylindrical cells have the curvature partly outside of "the box", though.
@nevadaxelizabeth Жыл бұрын
i have been following this laptop for quite a bit, really love the industrial and kit approach but is still too damn expensive for what it is. i dont mind the thickness as i use a dell rugged laptop which is on a similar ballpark of thickness.
@Thalanox Жыл бұрын
Small scale production increases per-unit costs.
@rmcdudmk212 Жыл бұрын
Very cool portable computer. Dont know if id ever buy one but its cool to see manufaturers making crazy stuff like this. 👍
@calebv.2199 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making this. I was shopping for a laptop recently and entertained the idea of getting this, but now I can see that it wouldn't have been the right choice. Happier with what I have now!
@v1mja Жыл бұрын
I had one since day 1 and love it. With this thing, there is always something to tinker with, always a new project.
@MemelordSupreme Жыл бұрын
Love the idea and the concept is awesome but it's a bit too high priced for the performance you get. I really hope they can get the price to come down over time. The framework seems like the better purchase at the moment. I do hope they succeed with this endeavor though! The market as a whole needs to adopt a repair and replace model. It's great to see more companies coming out with repairable systems again.
@username7763 Жыл бұрын
There is a lot to love here. I can put up with most of the downsides. But the price is a big one and being ARM-only also is. I'd be more interested in it if there were an x86 option or something like the MiSTer FPGA in it. It seems very retro and those would be a better fit to have a retro laptop. But there are a ton of competing system on a module standards so it is hard to come up with a modular design for everything.
@309electronics5 Жыл бұрын
Would be cool if they sold a x86_64 intel/amd compute module or sold one that connects to a lattepanda or whatever x86_64 you like
@SigEpBlue Жыл бұрын
Same. ARM is a deal breaker for me, and if I ever do have to pay for anything with an ARM chip, it's never over $100. I just can't see where the $1,200 price is going here. The keyboard and trackball/pad aren't that great, and I see nothing "super modern" or cutting-edge in the machine that make me think it's a good value. That said, I do love that it's most open-source, and very repairable. Maybe they're catering to rich nerds...?
@username7763 Жыл бұрын
@@SigEpBlue The economies of scale make a big difference here. The reason why other laptops are so cheap in comparison is that cater to the mass market. Design costs can be spread out and parts purchased in bulk. This is why you can find a smartphone cheaper than a dev-board. But that is still a lot of money for that.
@tuskiomisham Жыл бұрын
I was really excited, until I saw it was just another Raspberry pi in disguise...
@xXfzmusicXx Жыл бұрын
Hey Jeff, a giant keyboard nerd here to explain what I think the reasoning behind the keyboard is. Firstly the control key, it's likely it's there because that's what the HHKB (Happy hacking keyboard) does with it's layout. Second the split keyboard is fairly common on smaller keyboards so that you can change layers, my guess is that the left is used to go up a layer and the right is for going down. Third the small spacebar in the middle is fairly similar to what you see on the JIS-ISO layout, commonly used in Japan. My guess here is that the creator made a keyboard that fits him, and his quirks and planned to make it different in the future. Hopefully we'll see more layout options in the future, with how easilly the parts are to swap out. Lastly as a comment on the laptop, I'd be all in at half the price, but it's a bit outside my wallet for now. Let's hope we can get the price down in the future, even if it removes some features. Maybe things can be changes more into modules so we could change those things ourselves to get the price down.
@iamdarkyoshi Жыл бұрын
Two things: As a user of trackpads who never uses the buttons... Double tap and hold on the second tap to drag, and tap with two fingers to right click. Not sure if this thing's trackpad is configured that way, but pretty much every modern machine I've used is set up to do that. Second.... The USB ports are upside down. Sad. Looks like a neat device though!
@xponen Жыл бұрын
Can you draw a dashed line if using such trackpads? I've seen laptops with software that configure its trackpad, for example to use its edge for scrolling. A better solution is to do the same for left & right click, use an area on the trackpad for clicking instead of double-tapping.
@iamdarkyoshi Жыл бұрын
You can, it's not gonna be particularly efficient though. Double tap and hold, drag, lift, touch, drag, lift, double tap and hold, drag, lift, touch, drag, ect...
@kevinmalec4977 Жыл бұрын
It looks like there's enough space in the case (with case modification) to have a trackpad and real buttons. I'm too used to trackpad now to use anything else on a laptop, and buttons are needed for fast window manager use, and also for CAD (which the hardware may be too limited for)
@devops117 Жыл бұрын
once you change audio output manually, the next time you connect the device it should automatically switch to it for audio output
@GSBarlev Жыл бұрын
It has a trackball. It. Has. A. *Trackball.* Probably not for me, but I very well may buy their trackball and try to swap it into my own build.
@gannas42 Жыл бұрын
Wayyyy cool. Would love to have one. The price point makes me cry, though. Far outside the realm of what I am willing to spend.
@zaneearldufour Жыл бұрын
A low-profile cherry framework keyboard would be incredible
@MadMaxGyver Жыл бұрын
4 Amps at 24V is 96W not 48W (the power adapter is 24V 2.5A BTW...)
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
Gaaah you're right! I even have that nice closeup of the adapter on the screen at 3:23 - I'll add a 'correction' for the video that should pop in that section. D'oh!
@finndriver1063 Жыл бұрын
Great video! Could you do one on the open-hardware PowerPC notebook? It seems like a project for OSH/OSS enthusiasts and PPC diehards, but it seems like a well-run project. (I also commented on the short so sorry if this is déjà vu)
@GobbertronАй бұрын
I think the batteries look pretty cool, but they probably could've also made it significantly smaller with panel li-ions instead that could still be interchangeable. Probably would end up costing a lot more with all the changes though
@valiantviktor Жыл бұрын
As someone who loathes thin and light laptops, the only thing bugging me is that price tag. Everything else about it is BEYOND lovely.
@Zahgurym Жыл бұрын
Exactly... the thickness is a selling point for me just as much as the modability.
@StormWarningMom Жыл бұрын
I like the thickness of it too. Gives me a feeling of stability.
@GmailNexus Жыл бұрын
Man your new Studio Setup looks awesome. So clean and well lit 🤩
@classicpcgaming4194 Жыл бұрын
0:09 ✅ It's a bit thicc.
@SarahKchannel Жыл бұрын
Oy, you where supposed to send all back - that included the sticker 😂 !!
@greenaum Жыл бұрын
True geeks know the power of the IBM Nipple! I wonder if they do a keyboard with that? My old Thinkpad had the mouse buttons above the trackpad, which was also exactly where they needed to be to use with the nipple. Also let you swap out the CD-ROM for a floppy or a second battery. Back when IBM actually made them! I'd love one of those again with a modern spec. I suppose one might hollow one out and stick one of these ARM SBC's into it.
@RetroOnSpeedDial Жыл бұрын
The design seems dated in a way that doesn't negatively affect it. It certainly does look like my PowerBook 1400, but the thickness feels amazing when typing and the trackpad being smaller means your palms naturally rest just below the keyboard, keeping your fingers centered. There's cons to the design, but it will age significantly better than anything else out there. When rpi and everyone else is making more powerful chips, all it would take is a new heat sink, fan and a nice new clear acrylic base plate. Would be awesome if the company made an aluminium base plate that doubled as a heat sink, though.
@skaltura Жыл бұрын
The one good selling point for that laptop is completely open and repairable, as big system more rugged too. They should make a doomsday rugged version, a laptop meant to survive the worst of doomsdays, and be in the field! XD Even if it's just for the cool factor, and people working in remote areas for prolonged periods of time (ie. antarctica for example)
@tlee65622 күн бұрын
The best part about this is that EVERYTHING is available for purchase on their website, so you can just buy what you need, and go from there. Great concept!
@PeterHonig. Жыл бұрын
At around 4:46 you give viewers the impression that all Linux distros boot into a command line console (which might scare away potential Linux users). Actually, such is definitely not the case with the vast majority of Linux distros, as the boot normally takes you into a GUI (unless you run something like the server version of Ubuntu). In fact, it is my opinion that a distro such as KDE Plasma for example has a far superior and easier to use GUI than either Windows or Mac OS,. However, I really don't like the Linux implementation on your laptop, as it doesn't seem to be very user-friendly or well implemented, and would not consider it to be a representation of modern Linux systems. I used to be an avid Windows user and switched only 8 months ago to Linux. My only regret is that my incorrect preconception that Linux was for geeks, didn't allow me to do so sooner. Anyway, since then I never looked back.
@Fr_Dae8 ай бұрын
for the headphone issue, depend of your OS, on Lubuntu 24.04, it's automatic
@taylor-worthington Жыл бұрын
The lack of open source trackpad stuff is one of the weirdest matrix glitches. It seems like it would entice devs more as its a very concise issue: I mean also one of the sexier one-and-done elements of a linux desktop.
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
It's gotten a LOT better in the past few years-it used to be absolutely painful to use a trackpad with Linux. Now at least it's on par with Windows in most scenarios (IMO). Just... Apple was leaps and bounds ahead when they went all-in on the glass trackpad designs a few years back.
@KD_Puvvadi Жыл бұрын
Are they using rp2040 as hid controller for track ball 12:19
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
Yep, you spotted it!
@waytostoned9 ай бұрын
Almost 2 grand for same specs as a 200 dollar phone... no thanks. Almost 200 dollars for a Pi adapter, and 300 for banana pi? Geebus. This is never going to be mainstream with those prices.
@urgaynknowit9 ай бұрын
Yeah that’s the thing tho: it’s not meant to be mainstream. This is 100% designed for the .01% that prototypes new hardware and software combos . This is SUPER niche, but that’s what it was designed for
@eldengard236 ай бұрын
Id buy it just to support future development if i had extra cash to burn 🤷♀️
@RYFABGarage4 ай бұрын
Good thing it’s not meant to be
@xurtis Жыл бұрын
“Apple’s trackpad is still my gold standard” and it also doesn’t have any physical buttons
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
But it allows push to click, tons of gestures, right click, etc!
@xurtis Жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling and “push even harder to click again”
@8cyl6speed Жыл бұрын
Run ubuntu on it and report back
@Nobodynowhere-d5g3 ай бұрын
What do you want him to report? "Yeah Ubuntu runs on here just like pretty much every other machine ever built"??
@Sl00thhhhhАй бұрын
Baby Linux
@shadow654326 күн бұрын
What won’t it run on?
@8cyl6speed26 күн бұрын
@@Nobodynowhere-d5g how stable is it
@shanegibbens Жыл бұрын
Being able to replace individual cells for battery's is wonderful, so happy to see that
@None17555 Жыл бұрын
It's kind of unsettling that he keeps referring to "MacBooks and ChromeBooks," as if the Linux enthusiast community doesn't all but exclusively use Windows (targeted) hardware... Nevermind that the general populace overwhelmingly buys Windows when they shop laptops. This is like comparing every car to the Hyundai equivalent.
@KingEvL0n310 ай бұрын
Who the hell uses a MacBook except pretentious snobs who pretend to know about "computers" yet have to pay ridiculous prices to have Geniuses fix it.. Don't get me started on Chromebooks worthless trash 🗑️🤬 I think this would be cool because they don't sell laptop barebones l been looking for 20+ years only drawback is using a SMB but the new Pi 5 looks promising with a GPU Hat, I want to build the ultimate hacker cyberdeck with that thing
@russc7889 ай бұрын
Also, the Linux or Raspberry Pi journey typically begins with starting up a windows machine.
@roxasparks9 ай бұрын
Frfr😂😂
@GamingWithUncleJon8 ай бұрын
@@russc788mine never has. Though most of my computers are used and started life with Windows, before the version for their specs went EOL and they were liquidated by the original owners.
@JuliusLagman Жыл бұрын
Thank you for covering this. I'm glad this exists, and I am looking forward to when their Pocket Reform becomes available.
@davidmoll7250 Жыл бұрын
With the way it looks I am unsure if I would dare to take it to any airport, even if I show them that its a laptop. But besides that its seems like a great step in the right direction and I hope more companies besides them and Framework join the fight
@SlaveToMyStomach Жыл бұрын
Looks???? Having flown domestically in the US twice, in the last few months, I can say this would not be a problem. I did not have to take my laptop or another electronics out of my carry-on bag. (I did have everything in clear plastics bags just in case). The scanners (at the air ports) are pretty amazing,
@CedroCron Жыл бұрын
So cool! ... More to add to my "Want" list. Thanks Jeff!
@z900_lover93 ай бұрын
How i buy this laptop
@RaccoonParty87Ай бұрын
Have you tried googling it?
@alienPear28 күн бұрын
First you have to be a gringo. Second, no mortgage, student loans or/and health care Debs. Third, get $1500
@shadow654326 күн бұрын
The website it’s in the fucking description 😂
@shadow654326 күн бұрын
@@alienPearOh really? At checkout they ask if you’re a gringo?
@jasongooden917 Жыл бұрын
you can stick a piece of plastic across the split keys of the keyboard to make it one key
@jierenzheng7670 Жыл бұрын
Man, being able to swap the SBC is interesting. Too bad it is so thick. Would be fun if the Framework has this option.
@peltarlendori70274 ай бұрын
I like it, finally not some scrap laptop. but something I put together for myself, I have old HP laptops more than 20 years old, disassembled or in one piece, they still had material. This could be one of those, but it's priced in gold, and for many people, including me, that's unaffordable. Then you can buy a second hand business laptop with a replaceable memory NVME, SSD, Procesor. But the initiative, if you do not look at the price, especially the scythe is 10/10. Good luck and good hope to those who manage to buy the configuration that suits them.
@drunksupportcharacter Жыл бұрын
Finally a laptop with the mid 90s in mind, just need beige as a color option now, the more you use, the yellower it becomes. Also ill make the lid solar, just seems the way to go in my eyes.
@maninalift Жыл бұрын
You can tap and drag using one finger and doing so tends to be more precise (less chance that the second finger tapping in a different location will register as a movement and cause the cursor to move)
@MatrixMaverick1980 Жыл бұрын
I really love the philosophy.
@peepopalaber Жыл бұрын
I am sold, thanks for the review jeff.
@majkenxd Жыл бұрын
FINALLY, the video is up
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
Heh took me long enough!
@majkenxd Жыл бұрын
@@JeffGeerling i've been waiting since the twitter post you made about it
@jojobobbubble5688 Жыл бұрын
This is pretty cool, I have no use cases for it but I'd love to have one and take it to coffee shops. Would be an interesting conversation starter. LOVE the acrylic bottom!!
@TruthDoesNotExist Жыл бұрын
I am in love
@Knirin Жыл бұрын
The forced audio output switching is probably a lack of hot plug detection in either the sound card hardware or driver.
@JeffGeerling Жыл бұрын
Yep; I asked them about it-apparently it can be added to the driver, they just didn't have that as a priority yet.
@trueriver1950 Жыл бұрын
Buying this machine could be a valid political statement even if it's not the best value for money; especially for those who can afford it
@soyivanweinberg2 ай бұрын
Nice! I'll add this one to the Framework laptop to compare budgets as a next laptop to buy once mine says bye-bye, which hopefully will be in a lot of years from now.
@esra_erimez Жыл бұрын
I love this concept, but I would really like a 21 inch display
@andrewwojtas8486 Жыл бұрын
This honesty makes me interested if it would be possible have pi boards be used to replace motherboards for older laptop to help with recycling componets without needing to drop the rest of the hardware
@marksfolly123 Жыл бұрын
Good idea!
@llamallama15092 ай бұрын
I wish I had the money and the ability to use this laptop. But I'm glad it exists anyway
@charleshines2142 Жыл бұрын
It may be thick but a lot of people would love the freedom of being able to modify their device or even have easily replaceable parts. That is not something that will ever happen with a MacBook or any other Apple device!!