<div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div class="gmail_quote">rhayman writes: <br><div> <br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">
In Feb of 2017 I bought a Dell XPS-15, 32G RAM, 4KUHD 15", 1TB PCIe SSD<br>
The first thing I did after booting Windows 10 and running full<br>
diagnostics was replace the PCIe SSD with a Samsung 960Pro 1TB and the<br>
Killer AC 1535 BT/WiFi card with an Intel card (can't remember the<br>
model) for better throughput and better driver support at that time. <br>
Having replaced the PCIe SSD allowed me to re-install the Win10 SSD for<br>
low level firmware updates from Dell that wouldn't be coming from any<br>
Linux repo. </blockquote><div><br></div><div>That's good to know, but I'm wondering why you didn't do a dual boot.</div><div>It seems that would have allowed you to get those updates more than</div><div>once. In the past, I've replaced Windows on a laptop with Linux. That's</div><div>been great until I want to sell the laptop. Then I take a hit -- so with</div><div>this one I'm planning to dual boot it.</div><div> </div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">I've been running Ubuntu 16.04 on it ever since - even the<br>
TB16 docking station works with Ubuntu. I hear that Ubuntu 18.04<br>
doesn't run well on this laptop, yet.<br>
If this small laptop is too large (14.1x9.3x0.6), Dell does sell the<br>
XPS-13 (many similar specs to the XPS-15), and they used to sell a<br>
developers edition preinstalled with (can't remember the distro) Linux.<br>
When I did my research, I spent quite a bit of time creating a<br>
spreadsheet to compare the following:currently owned 2008 Apple MBPro -<br>
reference #1currently owned 2007 Lenovo T61p - reference #2currently<br>
owned 2010 Lenovo W500 - reference #32015 Apple MBPro MJLU2xx/A<br>
(11,4)2016 Apple MBProDell XPS-15 9560 max buildDell XPS-15 9560 min<br>
build, aftermarket upgradeHP Spectre x360 max buildHP Spectre x360 min<br>
build, aftermarket upgradeAsus Zenbook UX510VWLenovo Yoga 910Lenovo X1<br>
Carbon 4th GenLenovo T5604 different builds from min to max of the<br>
Lenovo P50<br>
I settled on the Dell XPS-15 9560 max build for $2500 because it had<br>
verified Linux installs and what it took to get Linux working on it<br>
(very little), it had 1-SD, 1-HDMI 1.4, 2-USB3, and 1-TB3 port and with<br>
the 97Whr battery, I get 6-8 hours of battery life. The two monitors I<br>
use with this laptop are a 32" 4KUHD and a 40" 4KUHD, depending on<br>
where I plug into which docking station. <br>
I've been very happy with this laptop, the Samsung 960 Pro is 400-1100<br>
MB/s faster reads and writes over the OEM PCIe SSD, so this machine<br>
boots to a usable logged in system in ~20 seconds, maybe less.<br>
Hope that helps, Oh, and the keyboard on the Dell XPS-15 9560 has the<br>
keys you listed<br><br></blockquote><div><br></div><div>Yeah, I've looked at scores of them and tend to forget what it was</div><div>about them that I didn't like. I'm interested in two Dell laptops at the</div><div>moment. The keyboards aren't great in my opinion, but I think I could</div><div>live with them. I don't like the weight/size of the 15" plus laptops, but</div><div>there aren't many 14" laptops with keyboards I like anymore. I was</div><div>reading an article about maintaining laptops that said to open them</div><div>up once a year and clean them with compressed air or cotton swabs.</div><div>Does anyone do that?</div><div><br></div><div>The cheaper of the two I'm looking at is more than I've spent on any</div><div>computer and the other one is a lot more. I'm not sure if I should </div><div>try to do more with less and buy the cheaper one. Or work up my </div><div>courage to buy the more expensive one.</div><div> </div><div><br></div><div>Brian</div><div>Ebenezer Enterprises - In G-d we trust.</div><div><a href="https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards">https://github.com/Ebenezer-group/onwards</a><br></div></div></div></div>