Out for a new laptop and perhaps the HP Dev One didn't take your fancy? Well now the Dell XPS 13 Plus Developer Edition has been properly certified for Ubuntu 22.04.
Canonical announced the update today on their blog, noting that the roll-out will begin in August for those who want the up to date experience on solid hardware. As Canonical also showed, this is the first mainstream hardware to be certified for Ubuntu 22.04.
While anyone can download Ubuntu (and other distributions) and attempt to run them on various devices, the point of the official certification is so that Canonical can ensure "that all of the components in a certified computer work as expected, so the user can be sure of the best experience out of the box". Of course, buying one with Linux pre-loaded like this also shows there's a market for more.
Some of the highlights of the XPS Plus include:
- 12th Gen Intel® Core™ 28W processors
- A seamless glass touch pad
- Improved quad speaker design resulting in incredible sound for music, movies and conferencing.
- Up to 4K+ resolution or vivid true-to-life colour on an OLED display with Eyesafe® that reduces harmful blue light
- M.2 PCIe Gen 4 NVMe Solid State Drive
- Up to 32 GB, LPDDR5, 5200 MHz, integrated, dual-channel
- Larger fans that provide 55% better airflow
- All-new packaging is made from 100% sustainably sourced or renewable materials with paper documentation that increases its recyclability.
From the press release:
“XPS is an innovation portal for Dell – from its application of cutting-edge technology to experimentation of new user interfaces and experiential design,” said Jaewook Woo, Product Manager, Linux Operating System, Dell Technologies. “By bringing the enhanced performance and power management features of Ubuntu 22.04 LTS to our most advanced premium laptop, Dell and Canonical reinforce our joint commitment to continue delivering the best computing experience for developers using Ubuntu.”
“The XPS 13 is a long-standing flagship range for Ubuntu on laptops”, said Oliver Smith, Product Manager for Ubuntu Desktop, Canonical. “It’s fantastic to see the XPS 13 Plus and Ubuntu 22.04 deliver a first-class hardware and software experience for developers, 10 years on from the start of Project Sputnik”.
dell.fr, same config : 2029€
:|
They had an additional signal sent in the charger cable that told the motherboard if it was a charger from their brand. If not, the battery would not charge.
That's what made me promise to never touch a Dell product again. Stuff like that furiates me.
Last edited by Beamboom on 22 July 2022 at 8:50 am UTC
Do Dell still operate with a charger technology where the battery won't charge unless it's an original Dell charger?On the flip side, Dell has always been the best option if you want to keep your laptop for a long time. You can get up to 5 years of next-day business repair, anywhere in the world. Dell will come to you even if you are on holiday, to your hotel, to repair your laptop for you. No other manufacturer offers you this that I am aware of; they always want you to send your laptop in, if not ship it via post, wait 2-4 weeks, and more than likely they'll be unable to repair it because they stopped producing those parts months or years ago.
They had an additional signal sent in the charger cable that told the motherboard if it was a charger from their brand. If not, the battery would not charge.
That's what made me promise to never touch a Dell product again. Stuff like that furiates me.
Dell sells replacement/spare parts on their official website. I spent several hours looking for a replacement charger for my ASUS laptop, but no one sells one. In order to get a replacement charger, I had to send my laptop in for repair and wait a month for it to come back. Huge pain.
That's when I made the decision never to buy a laptop from any manufacturer other than Dell. I had always used Dell laptops before, but my previous two laptops were ASUS laptops. After experiencing trouble with both of them, I've just accepted that it's a fact of life that laptops are going to break down, faster than you think.
On chargers: when I bought my current laptop, Dell upsold me the wrong spare charger (which was actually a power bank); the power bank could only be charged using a charger from 6+ years ago, which I fortunately had because I've had Dell laptops for a long time.
Laptops invariably all suck, I think, but Dell offers you the most recourse. At least Framework is around now for those interested in repairing their own devices.
You can get up to 5 years of next-day business repair, anywhere in the world. Dell will come to you even if you are on holiday, to your hotel, to repair your laptop for you. No other manufacturer offers you this that I am aware of; they always want you to send your laptop in, if not ship it via post, wait 2-4 weeks, and more than likely they'll be unable to repair it because they stopped producing those parts months or years ago.
As someone who's had a tech come in at short notice and replace the motherboard of my laptop on my kitchen table back when I was still running my own little business from home, I'm with you on this one. Definitely worth it if you can't make a living without the laptop.
That said, next business day on-site support is available from most of the big business brands. Dell, HP and Lenovo for sure. Price and quality of support might differ though. And they don't usually cover anything outside of their business ranges of products.
That said, next business day on-site support is available from most of the big business brands. Dell, HP and Lenovo for sure. Price and quality of support might differ though. And they don't usually cover anything outside of their business ranges of products.
You can add that for those manufacturers, parts are still made for a really long time, and all the business line from Dell, HP, and Lenovo are easily repaired. Same thing with chargers, I've work with both Dell and Lenovo only businesses, both had that bin full of old charger from their previous laptops so when a charger died, was lost/broken they just needed to fish an old one from the bin, no need to get a new one and even in the event you need one there plenty of third parties because they are so standard.
But for the onsite premium support you have to shell out a pretty big sum of money most of the time, nearly as much as the price of the machine itself.
The big problem is consumer grade brands, they are inconsistent in their design and the warranty is subpar. Most of the time you can't just go buy spare parts. Or have to rely on third parties for that.
What I find surprising is how expensive business line laptops and parts are when they are so standardized and stream lined.
On the flip side, Dell has always been the best option if you want to keep your laptop for a long time. You can get up to 5 years of next-day business repair, anywhere in the world.
For me, this is like arguing against criticism of Microsoft's practises with "on the flip side, they got a really good support department!".
I spent several hours looking for a replacement charger for my ASUS laptop, but no one sells one.
See, this is the point: You don't NEED a ASUS charger unless ASUS are jerks. You can use any multi-charger with the right output, make sure it's the right voltage and ampere and off you go. That's the whole point.
I have several multi-chargers at home (due to a unhealthy obsession with guitar pedals :D) and the charger connectors on laptops today are largely standard (inner and outer ring). Also on the Dell laptops. So you CAN use a non-Dell charger on that laptop, it will boot and run, the motherboard will just not allow the battery to be charged due to a tiny controller on the motherboard that checks this.
And no support department in the world justifies this, imo. It's bad practise.
Last edited by Beamboom on 25 July 2022 at 6:13 pm UTC
On the flip side, Dell has always been the best option if you want to keep your laptop for a long time. You can get up to 5 years of next-day business repair, anywhere in the world.
For me, this is like arguing against criticism of Microsoft's practises with "on the flip side, they got a really good support department!".
I realise this example is incidental to the point you're making, but Microsoft's support department is terrible. They pioneered having terrible support so that customers would never contact them for help, and now every mega technology corporation like Google and Facebook has followed suit. Have you tried contacting Microsoft's support department recently? I have.
I'm not saying that Dell's great support cancels out all they've done wrong but rather explaining why I made the choice to use them exclusively recently. It's not a counter-point but something additional to consider. I view the laptop market in general as an unfriendly industry, leaving people with terrible choices to make.
It was a lot of hard work trying to find a laptop WITHOUT a discrete GPU but with reasonable ports, like an ethernet port, 3+ USB-A ports, a headphone jack, and a HDMI port. I really don't want to play the dongle game. Dell has a business lineup of laptops that has good ports but no discrete GPU, which is exactly what I wanted. That was another reason I went for them.
I spent several hours looking for a replacement charger for my ASUS laptop, but no one sells one.
See, this is the point: You don't NEED a ASUS charger unless ASUS are jerks. You can use any multi-charger with the right output, make sure it's the right voltage and ampere and off you go. That's the whole point.
I have several multi-chargers at home (due to a unhealthy obsession with guitar pedals :D) and the charger connectors on laptops today are largely standard (inner and outer ring). Also on the Dell laptops. So you CAN use a non-Dell charger on that laptop, it will boot and run, the motherboard will just not allow the battery to be charged due to a tiny controller on the motherboard that checks this.
And no support department in the world justifies this, imo. It's bad practise.
As someone with...not much knowledge about electronics, I personally have no idea what to do here. Where do I even find a charger like this? How do I get the right output? I was looking for a charger compatible with the ASUS-supplied charger, but they don't exist (for a laptop sold 2 years ago). At least I know Dell won't leave me out to dry or force me to buy an entirely new product to replace it (Apple). Companies intentionally encumbering their products annoys me, and that's why I'm so vehemently against DRM. I'm not attempting to justify this behaviour.
I'm not sure how long I'll stick with Dell, but I'm definitely never going back to buying a laptop from a physical store location. That's when you get wrapped up in their customer support scams which are always worse than what the manufacturer offers. Even if you bought a Dell laptop at one of these locations, they wouldn't offer you the 5 years of next-day business repair service.
But for the onsite premium support you have to shell out a pretty big sum of money most of the time, nearly as much as the price of the machine itself.
This is certainly true. The 5 year support term was 1/3 of the price of the laptop, but I also think that it's completely worth it. I'd be spending more than that in 2-3 years when it breaks and I have to get a new laptop.
The big problem is consumer grade brands, they are inconsistent in their design and the warranty is subpar. Most of the time you can't just go buy spare parts. Or have to rely on third parties for that.
What I find surprising is how expensive business line laptops and parts are when they are so standardized and stream lined.
Completely agree on the low quality of consumer-grade laptops. As for the expense of business laptops...businesses are always willing to pay more for reliability. It's why Microsoft makes most of its money out of businesses, not consumers; they're a more reliable market.
While not all B2B companies treat their business customers well (Oracle), in general, they are treated far better than regular customers. If you treat business customers well, you will be rewarded with years and years of loyalty and guaranteed cashflow. You can also afford to knock up the prices a bit over time without fear of your customers jumping ship to whatever looks cheaper, because they'll start worrying about whether it's reliable as what they have now.
That said, next business day on-site support is available from most of the big business brands. Dell, HP and Lenovo for sure. Price and quality of support might differ though. And they don't usually cover anything outside of their business ranges of products.Thanks for letting me know this! I did wonder why Dell appeared to be the only brand that did this for years, when their support is actually fulfilled by IBM's network, of all companies, given that Dell is the company that took the largest slice of IBM's PC market share way back when.
I realise this example is incidental to the point you're making, but Microsoft's support department is terrible.
Indeed you are right. So my example were highly, highly hypothetical. :D
As someone with...not much knowledge about electronics, I personally have no idea what to do here. Where do I even find a charger like this? How do I get the right output?You find the specs on the old power supply! V (voltage) and A (ampere). Every supply has this stated. Then just get the same specs (or, in the case of ampere, the same or higher).
But I do understand that for those who really don't want to look into this and play it 100% safe, your mentioned service regime do hold a most definite value.
They could however offer the same without going down the forced proprietary route.
Last edited by Beamboom on 26 July 2022 at 8:34 pm UTC
You find the specs on the old power supply! V (voltage) and A (ampere). Every supply has this stated. Then just get the same specs (or, in the case of ampere, the same or higher).Don't forget the polarity, too, which is also stated on the power-supply;
!Centre-positive polarity symbol
For example, this one means that the connector is centre-positive. Centre-negative has the symbols the other way.
Last edited by Pengling on 26 July 2022 at 12:22 pm UTC
Don't forget the polarity, too, which is also stated on the power-supply;
Yeah true, it should be mentioned. Thanks.
Gotta say though that it is my impression it seems there is an established practise/standard to keep polarity like your illustration there, with positive in centre.
I have come across some exceptions to this on guitar pedals though.
Yeah true, it should be mentioned. Thanks.No problem - it's well worth knowing even outside of the realm of laptops, too, really.
Gotta say though that it is my impression it seems there is an established practise/standard to keep polarity like your illustration there, with positive in centre.Yeah, but there'll always be some company somewhere that wants to be the exception to the rule!
That's why I'm quickly starting to appreciate the USB-C power that some of my machines use - no more barrel-connector hassle, and it's easier than ever to get a compatible power-supply where necessary (which has only come up for me due to needing a spare so far, rather than due to any failures).
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