Usually when we get to talk about laptops from Linux hardware vendors they're on the pricey side but Star Labs are serving the underserved here with the new StarLite Mk IV. Coming with a sleek 11-inch ARC display with fancy anti-reflective matte coating for work and play in all environments.
Star Labs was formed back in 2016 by "a bunch of geeks" and they offer something not many vendors do with Linux support out of the box, open source firmware support that allows you to switch between American Megatrends (AMI) Aptio V or coreboot any time you feel like it. They even have their own open source coreboot configuration UI, that allows you to tweak all sorts of hardware settings.
Main StarLite Mk IV specifications:
Display | 11.6″ Matte IPS (1920×1080) 178° viewing angle |
CPU | Intel Pentium Silver N5030 1.1GHz, burst up to 3.1GHz |
GPU | Intel UHD Graphics 605 |
RAM | 8GB 2400MHz DDR4 |
Storage | 240GB SSD Up to 960GB |
Ports | DC Charging Jack USB-C (charging + data) USB 3.0 Type A USB 2.0 Type A Micro HDMI 3.5mm Headphone Jack MicroSD card reader |
Battery | 30.4Wh |
Expect a whisper quiet unit too with its fanless design. You also get a backlit keyboard, a smooth glass trackpad and dual speakers. You can select to have it pre-installed with Ubuntu 20.04.3 LTS, elementary OS 6, Kubuntu 20.04.3 LTS, Linux Mint 20.2, Manjaro 21.0 (various desktop environments), MX Linux 19.4, Zorin OS 16 and more.
It's not exactly offering up performance for days but you can't really turn your nose up at the £400 price tag. Shopping around a bit, that price actually seems really reasonable too compared with other more well-known vendors.
Available to order now, with shipping expected in January 2022. They offer a 5% discount for pre-orders.
Check it out on the Star Labs website.
I feel bad for these lowend laptop makers considering the deck is about to come out. They're not bad devices and for pure productivity the larger and higher res screen is nice but I imagine if the deck gets accessories that make it more into a convertible laptop it could swallow most of this lowend marketEven as someone who avoids using laptops, I very much doubt this. Tablets didn't kill the laptop market, and neither will the Steam Deck.
I feel bad for these lowend laptop makers considering the deck is about to come out. They're not bad devices and for pure productivity the larger and higher res screen is nice but I imagine if the deck gets accessories that make it more into a convertible laptop it could swallow most of this lowend marketThe sector that's challenged by the Steam Deck isn't laptops (cheap or otherwise), but gaming laptops with their terrible ergonomics. There are lots of computer tasks that you really need a keyboard for, and laptops will still continue to be fine for them.
I feel bad for these lowend laptop makers considering the deck is about to come out. They're not bad devices and for pure productivity the larger and higher res screen is nice but I imagine if the deck gets accessories that make it more into a convertible laptop it could swallow most of this lowend marketAs others have said, a laptop is still going to be far better for a lot of things. Not only that, the Steam Deck is only going to be available in limited quantities, with many people not getting one until late 2022 and beyond due to the demand and supply. Additionally, carrying around a small portable laptop like this versus a Steam Deck with a bunch of extra accessories? For work I know I would pick the laptop. Then again, why not both even? They serve different worlds.
With the chip shortage, I would suggest over-speccing your laptop to make it last longer though. This laptop will do your basic stuff decently well in the short term, but web stuff will probably get heavier over time and eventually you might want to use the laptop for more than you initially intended, so putting down a bit more money to avoid one upgrade cycle down the line is probably worth it.
There is a tiny bit of problem and it's not not the price, but the ram. It doesnt seem to be upgradable and thats a deal breaker for me.
Last edited by Avehicle7887 on 22 October 2021 at 11:46 pm UTC
EDIT: https://en.jingos.com/jingpad-a1/ This kind of looks promising if the community manages to boot other distros on it.
Last edited by Arehandoro on 23 October 2021 at 10:45 am UTC
One I have has touch screen however. Same CPU/GPU basically (and ram and ssd). And can fold 360deg to pad.
Last edited by TheRiddick on 23 October 2021 at 10:50 am UTC
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