system76

Repairing My Laptop: Amber Back To Life

Some days ago Amber, my loyal Pangolin from System 76, stopped working, apparently due to some power supply issue.

The System 76 guys were very kind, they helped me to discard the problem via email and offered me to repair it at not cost, honoring the warranty, but I was in Lima and couldn't ship it on time.

Hit the Road with Ubuntu and a System76 Pangolin

Just a few days ago I wrote about Dell, Ubuntu and Linux conquering the world in 2007. Today I'm the proud owner of a brand new System76 Pangolin.

System76 Pangolin

Her name is Amber (she joins Flenser, Woodcarver, Alpha and Manny) and she's a nice Core 2 Duo T7200 laptop with a gorgeous 15.4" wide screen and 2 Gb. of RAM running Ubuntu Feisty Fawn.

Ordering from System76 was a great experience, I was able to pay directly from my checking account, I got quick and friendly email replies from Carl and Erik to all my questions before and after buying and they even upgraded my shipping to 2nd day UPS for free.

The laptop works perfectly out of the box. I turned it on, followed Ubuntu's simple wizard to create my user account, which runs the first time you boot, and it detected my home Wi-Fi network instantly. I was browsing the Net in just a couple of minutes. I'll be telling you more about sweet Amber in a few days, she's now my main computer.

I plan on buying another laptop later this year and even if I'd like to try a Linux Dell I'm quite happy with my first System76 and could go for a Serval next.

Anyway, if you're on the market for a Linux laptop, System76 is highly recommended. Meanwhile, why don't you meet Amber on Flickr?

2007: The Year For Linux on Laptops

A few months ago I knew about a cool small company: System 76, embraced by many in the Linux GNU community because they were one of the few selling desktops and, specially, laptops with Linux preinstalled.

Running Linux on laptops has always been problematic because many hardware manufacturers are too reserved with their software, hence the development of open source drivers is harder or sometimes just impossible.

Even if any modern Linux distribution includes many drivers and can detect a lot of current hardware, expecting full wireless, video and multimedia support in laptops was often some kind of a gamble.

But that's started to change and System76 has been one of the best examples of companies providing open hardware and writing their own drivers for Linux. The company even has a forum hosted by Ubuntu, the distribution pre-installed on all their machines.

And there were so many great testimonials of people using System76's laptops with Ubuntu that I couldn't resist and ordered mine a few days ago, it should be arriving next week.

But that's not all, the biggest computer manufacturer in the world, Dell, started listening to their users some months ago, they asked for, actually screamed for, you guessed, Linux. After a few weeks Dell told the world the good news, they would start offering desktops and laptops with Linux pre-installed, goodbye Windows tax!

Yesterday, May 1st, 2007, we reached what I think is the tipping point of Linux:
Dell announced a deal with Ubuntu, which will be preinstalled in their Linux desktops and laptops.

There's no doubt that this move will make the number of Linux users skyrocket.

The world is changing, there's no coming back, and you know what? Even if the change started many years ago thanks to a few great minds and now we are millions of Linux geeks around the globe, Ubuntu, System76 and Dell have already earned their place as very important players.

And of course, I already have a Linux Dell laptop in my wishlist.