Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Mon, 06 Dec 1999 16:34:11 -0700
From:      Brett Glass <brett@lariat.org>
To:        mobile@freebsd.org
Subject:   Latest laptop recommendations
Message-ID:  <4.2.0.58.19991206161653.03e8cdf0@localhost>

next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
My old ThinkPad 760E is just about to go out of warranty, and given the 
number of times it has been to the shop it will not pay to maintain it the 
next time it malfunctions. It also has a number of serious design flaws. 
It's cursed with a power management system that doesn't work very well; 
even Windows won't survive a suspend/resume, though it's supposed to. The 
docking station ("Ultradock II") must have been designed by a hand surgeon 
who wanted more carpal tunnel work; it lifts the keyboard nearly 4 inches 
off the desktop. The thermal design is ludicrous; in the dock, the heat 
pipe which is supposed to cool the machine rests against the dock and gets 
no air circulation. The hard disk rests against the back of the RAM module 
and can overheat it. The machine contains an MWave DSP that serves as both 
sound chip and modem and does neither well (it doesnt function at all under 
FreeBSD). The Trident Cyber display adapter provides virtually no 
acceleration under X Windows. Finally, it can't hold both a floppy drive 
and a CD-ROM drive at once, and swapping is awkward.

I'm therefore looking for recommendations for a replacement. The new unit 
should have a 15" LCD, and should have hardware that's compatible with 
FreeBSD, XFree86, and OSS. Many new systems have Rockwell or Lucent 
"lobotomodems" that only run under Windows, or sound chips like the ESS 
Maestro  which don't do SoundBlaster emulation without a special companion 
chip that's being left out of many machines now. (I hear that the 
commercial version of OSS supports the Maestro only partially. It doesn't 
provide wavetable MIDI, making it much less useful for music.) Some display 
chips, such as NeoMagic's, don't seem to have good X support, and I want to 
avoid these. I'd also like to find a system with a dock or port extender 
that really works, as well as suspend/resume that is compatible with FreeBSD.

So far, the best candidate I've found is the Gateway Solo 9150 -- not their 
latest model, nor their fastest (the 9150 has a 333 MHz Celeron). But it 
seems to use supported chipsets. Does anyone have experience with this 
model? With others that are worth considering?

--Brett Glass



To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org
with "unsubscribe freebsd-mobile" in the body of the message




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?4.2.0.58.19991206161653.03e8cdf0>