Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Red Hat Software Linux Hardware Technology

Lenovo Releases First Fedora Linux ThinkPad Laptop (zdnet.com) 80

Today, Lenovo has released a ThinkPad with Red Hat's community Linux, Fedora. ZDNet reports: First in this new Linux-friendly lineup is the X1 Carbon Gen 8. It will be followed by forthcoming versions of the ThinkPad P1 Gen2 and ThinkPad P53. While ThinkPads are usually meant for business users, Lenovo will be happy to sell the Fedora-powered X1 Carbon to home users as well. The new X1 Carbon runs Fedora Workstation 32. This cutting-edge Linux distribution uses the Linux Kernel 5.6. It includes WireGuard virtual private network (VPN) support and USB4 support. This Fedora version uses the new GNOME 3.36 for its default desktop.

The system itself comes standard with a 10th Generation Intel Core 1.6Ghz i5-10210U CPU, with up to 4.20 GHz with Turbo Boost. This processor boasts 4 Cores, 8 Threads, and a 6 MB cache. It also comes with 8MBs of LPDDR3 RAM. Unfortunately, its memory is soldered in. While that reduces the manufacturing costs, Linux users tend to like to optimize their hardware and this restricts their ability to add RAM. You can upgrade it to 16MBs, of course, when you buy it for an additional $149. For storage, the X1 defaults to a 256GB SSD. You can push it up to a 1TB SSD. That upgrade will cost you $536.

The X1 Carbon Gen 8 has a 14.0" Full High Definition (FHD) (1920 x 1080) screen. For practical purposes, this is as high-a-resolution as you want on a laptop. I've used laptops with Ultra High Definition (UHD), aka 4K, with 3840x2160 resolution, and I've found the text to be painfully small. This display is powered by an integrated Intel HD Graphics chipset. For networking, the X1 uses an Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201 802.11AX with vPro (2 x 2) & Bluetooth 5.0 chipset. I've used other laptops with this wireless networking hardware and it tends to work extremely well. The entire default package has a base price of $2,145. For now, it's available for $1,287. If you want to order one, be ready for a wait. You can expect to wait three weeks before Lenovo ships it to you.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Lenovo Releases First Fedora Linux ThinkPad Laptop

Comments Filter:
  • by Chaset ( 552418 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:37PM (#60471122) Homepage Journal

    From the summary
    >The X1 Carbon Gen 8 has a 14.0" Full High Definition (FHD) (1920 x 1080) screen. For practical purposes, this is as high-a-resolution as you want on a laptop. I've used laptops with Ultra High Definition (UHD), aka 4K, with 3840x2160 resolution, and I've found the text to be painfully small.

    Then they're doing it wrong. High res display is to make the text smoother (and thus easier to read), not to make it smaller. Doesn't the included DE properly support high res displays?

    • Re:Text too small? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by fluffernutter ( 1411889 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:58PM (#60471180)
      High res and text size are two different things. If the default OS sizes are too small on the screen, it doesn't matter how clear it is, it will be hard to read.
      • But as they pre-install the system, they can configure default font size when doing so.

        And if Gnome is this un-themeable, then they can upgrade to a better window manager.

      • Re:Text too small? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @08:05PM (#60471364) Homepage Journal

        When the people who design your GUI are stubborn and refuse to design scaleable interface elements. That's why it often does not looks right at high resolution on a small display. My 30" 2560x1440 display reports 96x96 dpi. A 1920x1080 14" should report something around 157 dpi. A 10 point font should by physically the same size on both displays (a . should be 10/72nds of an inch).

        There is a per display DPI attribute in X11 that is autodetected correctly in 99% of cases (from the display's EDID) . GTK, QT, Freetype [sourceforge.net], etc can see and use the DPI setting just fine. Why toolkits hack it to undo the DPI settings is probably not done for any good reason, and I say hack because Freetype (and Pango and Cairo) can see DPI and therefor the problems must be intentionally introduced at higher layers of software.

        • There is a per display DPI attribute in X11 that is autodetected correctly in 99% of cases (from the display's EDID) . GTK, QT, Freetype, etc can see and use the DPI setting just fine. Why toolkits hack it to undo the DPI settings is probably not done for any good reason, and I say hack because Freetype (and Pango and Cairo) can see DPI and therefor the problems must be intentionally introduced at higher layers of software.

          95% of X not being able to do something is actually toolkits being crap.

        • I found 123 DPI to be the ideal DPI for my eyes at my normal sitting distance. My price comparison site (geizhals.de, highly recommended) allows filtering by DPI. So I picked the biggest full-SRGB IPS display I could find in my price range, and got 2560x1440 too, back then.

          So... at 96x96 DPI ... are you running a 30.6" screen perchance?

    • by amorsen ( 7485 )

      I have the exact laptop, running Fedora 32, except in 4k (and obviously it came with Windows).

      You can literally switch between 1920x1080 at 100% and 3840x2160 at 200% and the only thing that changes is the blurriness. Every application I have tried just works, no change in size of anything -- except some Wine applications need to be relaunched after the switch.

  • by Luthair ( 847766 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:42PM (#60471136)
    So its actually more expensive than the Windows laptop with the same specs? May as well buy the Windows version, install Linux, and when you're done you can reinstall Windows for better resale.
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Fedora is also an odd choice for picking a Linux operating system, as you only get 1 year of OS update support for it.

      They would probably be better off choosing RHEL8 or the latest Ubuntu LTS release.

      • If they're going the Fedora/RHEL route I think they would be better off using CentOS. It may be slightly behind when it comes to updates but it will be the most stable and doesn't cost like RHEL. Going with CentOS (or Ubuntu LTS as you suggest) would prevent novice users from running into hairy problems.

        . . .written on a Fedora device. If I ever do a fresh install on this laptop it will become a CentOS device, though.

        • I'll disagree with this a bit. I think Fedora is actually a <em>great</em> choice of a distro to target. It moves rapidly and so you can use the latest hardware in your laptop and know that it will be easy to get the drivers into the distribution in time for sale. At the same time, Fedora is the basis for both RHEL and CentOS which means that RedHat, who employ many of the kernel developers, mostly care quite a bit about getting new things in Fedora fed back into upstream distros.

          If your lapto
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by lactose99 ( 71132 )

        Fedora does in-place upgrades through two releases. Good luck getting that with RHEL or LTS.

      • Lots of developers like Fedora, and it works well out of the box. I actually dumped Ubuntu on my X1 in favor of Fedora because it just worked so much better out of the box with things like bluetooth.
      • by jon3k ( 691256 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @10:17PM (#60471668)
        Fedora upgrades are easy and painless. The installation I'm posting from started as Fedora 26 or 27 and was upgraded through each release to Fedora 32 without a single hiccup.
      • by Zappy ( 7013 )

        I tried CentOS 8 on my laptop, I welcomed not having to upgrade to ~ 10 years. I reverted to Fedora within a month.

        The experience made me fully understand why they went with Fedora. Lots of packages a laptop/desktop user would want are not available for CentOS 8 even a year after release repo's are seriously lacking.

        • by jon3k ( 691256 )
          Yeah I'm a long time Red Hat and Fedora user. Red Hat since 4 (not EL4, but literally Red Hat 4.0 circa 1996) and Fedora since Fedora Core 1 (it used to have core in the name!). Even at this point I still routinely find missing packages that were available in EPEL for CentOS 7 that are still not available for CentOS 8. Not to mention the cgroups v2 docker issues.

          CentOS is absolutely not a desktop operating system, at least for me.
      • The X1 at least has another advantage even if you never run Linux, it has a Linux-friendly mode in the BIOS which disables at the hardware level a bunch of Windows 10 crap that's otherwise impossible to get rid of. For example "modern sleep", a.k.a. cook-your-laptop mode can be disabled in the BIOS by setting it up for Linux-compatible operation. It's nice to see a vendor support Linux at the hardware level rather than just "well, you can install Linux instead of Windows if you insist".
    • Indeed. Why is this news? Thinkpads have traditionally been well supported in the Linux world, and I doubt it has anything to do with Lenovo's input.
      • by mattdm ( 1931 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @10:55PM (#60471734) Homepage

        It actually *does* have a lot to do with Lenovo's input. They came to Red Hat's desktop team and said that they're getting demand they want to fill. They're working with their hardware suppliers for components to make sure all of those components work with Linux and get firmware updates via LVFS. They also very much wanted to make sure that the systems work with out-of-the-box Fedora Workstation with no custom kernel or special modifications.

        • Ok, then. Why do regular "windows" Thinkpads all work well with Ubuntu? Are you going to claim that their relationship with Microsoft contributed to this?
      • It's likely because they expect support cost to be higher, particularly among users who buy it preconfigured that way. If you're willing and able to reinstall yourself, the support cost will not be as high.

        Of course, their secret licensing deal with Microsoft probably also has some anti-competitive rules like you pay us for every unit produced regardless of windows installs.

    • by mattdm ( 1931 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @10:53PM (#60471730) Homepage

      The base price for the Linux system is cheaper. Looks like there is a specific Windows preconfigured model which is on deeper discount right now. I don't think you can get a 16GB Windows model cheaper than the Fedora model (at least not normally -- again, a specific model may have a sale price in te future at some point).

      • by Luthair ( 847766 )
        When I followed the link earlier the Fedora laptop they showed was 40$ more expensive than the Windows 10 version with identical specs.
    • You'd be supporting Microsoft that way.
      It's the same morale conoundrum as buying local or buying from China at a lower price, knowing what you're doing with that.
      (OK, for hardware, you're also buying from China in any case. ;)

  • Only 8MB of RAM?!?!? (Score:3, Informative)

    by fbobraga ( 1612783 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:46PM (#60471152) Homepage
    yeap, its in the source article :P
    • 640k is enough for anyone

    • The base model has only 8MB, which I agree is less than I'd want, but presents a budget option. You can upgrade to 16 (soldered). The P1 Gen 2 and P53 are on the way, and those allow higher memory configurations (and are user-upgradeable).

    • I'm working on a 16GB mac book pro right now - and I'd like 32GB. 16GB is enough for most of the day, but you try opening a few browser tabs onto "web apps" and then things go wrong quite quickly. Not all my memory is browser, but once you've got email, slack and maybe a bit of docker going, you need a bit more ram (definitely if you want to use a VM or two).

      It's nice to see this happening, and I'll bet it's a nice machine to use. I'll wait until a 32GB-capable version comes out though :-(

  • by schwit1 ( 797399 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:49PM (#60471160)

    Dell and Lenovo have decided to move the Home and End keys to the top row. WTF are they thinking?

    Since these 2 laptop resellers started doing this about the same I suspect they buy components from the same Chinese manufacturer.

    • On all the Lenovo machines we purchased, the Esc key is in the top left corner on all of them.

    • Better than where Apple puts the home and end keys on Macbooks.
    • the keyboard layout must have something to do with the Lenovo slogan that I always hated: "Styled for premium performance"

    • As long as the Function key is still on the outside

    • They've been doing that for something like 8 years now? They really need to go back to the keyboard they were using back about 15 years ago, like on the R60/T60. Better layout, better keys, better feel. And while not a problem for the X1, also ditch the numpad on the machines that have it, or make it optional. I guess to their credit they at least don't change the layout every year like some laptop manufacturers.

  • by bmimatt ( 1021295 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @06:57PM (#60471176)
    Not enough juice to treat it as a serious dev machine.
    In todays world, it would need a lot more memory to handle a serious Java api/app with some infrastructure behind it, even if all containerized.
    (Yes I do realize swapping to SSD is pretty fast, but that is substandard to me personally)
    • You could also, I dunno, just order it with beefier specs. Not all workflows need massive amounts of RAM or a really powerful processor.
      • Well, 16G seems to be maximum configurable (at least via their website configurator). So... No, not really. Thanks for playing.
    • Then don't pick a laptop type optimized for minimum size and weight. This is an ultra portable, if you want more than 16 GB of ram and a faster processor you don't want an ultraportable.

      But something seems off if 16GB of ram won't cut it. You should be able to turn your setup to use far less.

      • 16 definitely doesn't cut it for some of my work projects. Some applications have a very large memory footprint and I am rarely in place where I could spend months trying to shed some fat, even if I effectively could.
    • What the hell kind of crap are you running?

      On what planet is coding not the work that needs the lowest specs of all tasks that are not pure text writing?

      But why do I ask... "java" and "containerized" already tells it all. Generation "brutally clueless hacks".

      • I'm not huge java fan either (looking at you GC), I don't get to choose what stack my clients chose when they built out their platforms. If they choose to run SOLR or Elasticsearch, then I have to run java in my dev, even if their core platform codebase is in Node.

        I usually run virtualized (recently, mostly containerized), scaled down but complete infrastructure in my dev environment. I run it via same automation that manages {qa,staging,prod}, just much smaller than say prod, with minimal backing dataset
    • It's plenty powerful enough to remote into a much better machine to do the actual development work on.

  • by Zontar The Mindless ( 9002 ) <plasticfish@info.gmail@com> on Thursday September 03, 2020 @07:03PM (#60471198) Homepage

    "Nothing to see here, move along..."

    • It also has an Intel processor and Intel graphics.

      Linux users want AMD processors and AMD graphics now.

      They fucked this up completely.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        That may be so, certain SOME Linux users want to avoid Intel. But I haven't found a decent laptop that does so. Even mid-high boxes are limited.

        • I'm surprisingly happy with my $300 wally world special Ryzen 3. I mean, the graphics are awfully slow, but they work well with Mint. And they even hold up to vintage gaming. I've been playing Freelancer using an install script from the Forum and it's been good for that for example. So basically anything I remember enjoying from about the Win95 days through XP or so is worth trying.

          As for doing real work, it's decent enough to compile typical software, and it has plenty of CPU for DTP, basic graphics, etc.

      • Both my machines are Intel/Nvidia. I'm not a purist in that regard. (And to give credit where due, dealing with Nvidia's tech support has been a very positive experience the 3-4 times I've filed a ticket with them regarding issues I've had using their stuff under Linux.)

        But keeping me from upgrading the RAM and/or disk so they can try to force me to buy a more expensive model at a price increase that's 2-3 times what those components would cost me at Best Buy is one of the reasons I won't use Apple kit.

  • by Lady Galadriel ( 4942909 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @07:48PM (#60471318)
    Have to bash Intel, (they deserve it, and more), as my shell told me to do it :-).

    Lenovo, why not an AMD Ryzen 4xxx mobile with Linux?

    The AMD Ryzen 4xxx mobile chips seem nice, and other vendors have them listed. With socketed SO-DIMMs, and non-Windows, (HP's ProBook for example).
    Plus, you can get a Ryzen 7 mobile with 8 cores and 16 threads.
    • Oh they do, the Ryzen E14/E15 and T14/T14s support Linux very nicely.

      • Oh they do, the Ryzen E14/E15 and T14/T14s support Linux very nicely.

        Ah, the Ryzen E14 & E15 come with the MS-Windows tax. (Meaning you have to pay for MS-Windows even if you throw it away after installing Linux.) And the T14/T14s are Intel processors, (with the MS-Windows tax too).

        But your point is taken.

        As a bit of trivia, one of my former employers used either Mac books or Lenovo laptops as our work computers. I had a Lenovo running the official RHEL and it worked fine, (supported by IT department).

    • 4xxx Ryzen isn't fully baked into the linux kernel yet. the next production kernel should be good to go, but currently you have to hack grub to even get it to boot.
      • Thank you for the information. That might have bit me unawares when my new Ryzen 4xxx laptop arrives in 2 weeks.

        Had to run a later kernel when I first installed my Ryzen 2400G mini-desktop last year. Now I can run the long term release kernels that Gentoo Linux puts out. Today, quite stable and rarely have to touch the kernel. (Except of course when I leave something out, like SquashFS. Had to fix that just last night...)
      • Oops. I thought the boot procedure would be standard on x86 chips.
    • by mattdm ( 1931 )

      Lenovo is exploring whether an AMD offering is worth their time and effort. If you're a sincere potential customer, let them know.

    • I just got my son a Ryzen Thinkpad for school. Integrated mobile Vega, running Buster with the latest 'unsigned' kernel from -backports. $430 from NewEgg on a special they were running. Business-level BIOS and everything so you can burn the CompuTrace fuse, disable the clitmouse, and swap Fn and Ctrl.

      Everything works - probably should have bought two.

  • They could have put something on it that people would have wanted.
    • by jon3k ( 691256 )
      Fedora is one of the most widely used linux distribution and also functions as the test bed for RHEL (and CentOS), so it's a good way to preview what is to come and familiarize yourself with it. It is also a very bleeding edge distro so people that want the latest and greatest frequently choose Fedora.
  • by Espectr0 ( 577637 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @08:56PM (#60471456) Journal

    8GB of ram soldered in and over $1200. why are companies so greedy and selling RAM configurations from 10 years ago?

  • by noz ( 253073 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @09:01PM (#60471472)

    I was an IBM/Lenovo fanboy until three things happened:
    1. My X1 Carbon Gen4 was not as good as usually expected. Also some important parts were not up to spec in comparison to similar products from competitors (e.g. CPU was lower spec).
    2. Eventually support was needed, and it stank. I had paid for premium support, yet it took about a month to get a keyboard fixed. This fix was also not good enough. (New parts noticeably lower quality than the original.)
    3. I was given a reasonably modern Dell when I started a new job. It is amazing. Up to spec. Light. Resilient. Decent keyboard. Now the sticker price is very high, but when the Lenovo finally keels over I will consider a high priced Dell.

  • 1TB SSD.$536 what a rip at least X2 the price and that is not counting the cost of the base 256GB

  • ESR predicted this 20 years ago.

  • by Penguinoflight ( 517245 ) on Thursday September 03, 2020 @09:54PM (#60471628) Journal

    ... is buying quad cores with 8GB memory for $1300?

    That wasn't a good price in 2016 and it's doubly not a good price now.

  • With 8MB of RAM, that you can upgrade to 16MB.

    I remember those days...

"An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup." - H.L. Mencken

Working...