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| Hi folks, I know the website linux-laptop exists and I do go through it now and then. However, it is not easy to separate out current hardware from discontinued hardware on that website. Hence, I am inviting some suggestions. I have a LinuxCertified LC2210D laptop that I purchased in April 2004. Came preloaded with Linux (no M$ tax there - check). However, I was less than happy about the quality of the hardware. No complaints about service - it was great (perhaps one of the best I have seen) - they shipped me a replacement CMOS battery which failed 6 months after purchase (odd in itself) for free, replaced the battery that died within 6-7 months for free, the hard disk died a little over a year later, which they also fixed for free, and finally when the BIOS started failing, they sent me a replacement laptop (refurbished). Now, the display of this laptop has started giving me problems (some loose connection in the hinge, I guess). I am definitely past the warranty period, so I cannot expect them to fix it again, but I cannot help contrast this experience with my experience with an IBM ThinkPad i1300 which lasted me about 3 years and I gave that up only because it started overheating. LinuxCertified is a great company as far as service goes, but I am not really interested in having my laptop gone for servicing so many times for 15-20 days (the overall turnaround time, including shipping) at a time. My work needs my laptop around and if components like CMOS batteries start failing six months after purchase and hard disks start failing about a year after purchase, it does not reflect well on the parts supplier that LinuxCertified uses. Any suggestions as to which new laptop I should buy ? My current laptop has an Intel 855GM graphics chipset, and recent versions of Xorg (I run Debian Etch (Testing)) have a ValidatePCI bug associated with it : http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugre...345914&trim=no Now, I cannot seem to find the Debian source packages for xorg even after adding : deb-src http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian etch main contrib non-free to my apt sources.list. That apart, Intel graphics chips use system memory, which means that accelerated graphics can become a hog on the system as a whole. Hence, I want to go for a machine that has a video card with on-board memory (like nvidia - I have had good experience with an nvidia GeForce 2MX on my old desktop). I have found an HP laptop (http://h18004.www1.hp.com/products/q...12446_div.HTML) that might be good and during a chat with their sales rep, I found that you can have the laptop preloaded with FreeDOS (no M$ tax). Further, this laptop (among many others that HP offers) is certified for SuSE Linux (and RHEL - no Debian certification here, but if it works with one linux distro, it must work for all major ones). What do you folks think of this choice / HP laptops in general (the ones that are certified for Linux) / other major brands that allow the no M$ choice ? Thanks. |