Comment on This laptop was MADE to be HACKED!
lnxtx@feddit.nl 6 months ago
Pricey for non x86_64 laptop.
The cheapest option is € 1,200.00.
You can choose between A311D and RK3588 SoC modules.
Comment on This laptop was MADE to be HACKED!
lnxtx@feddit.nl 6 months ago
Pricey for non x86_64 laptop.
The cheapest option is € 1,200.00.
You can choose between A311D and RK3588 SoC modules.
huginn@feddit.it 6 months ago
I’m not able to watch the video at the moment: is it ARM instead?
I think arm architecture are only going to become more prevalent with the success of the M line macs
tal@lemmy.today 6 months ago
shop.mntre.com/products/mnt-reform
Yes.
I dunno. They have a long battery life (though somebody that is just having a large battery in the laptop). But…
This comes running Debian. If you’re just running open-source software, like stuff out of a Linux distro, then you can use Debian’s ARM build of everything. But if you’re gonna run Steam on it, then you’re gonna be running x86 code, and that emulation is gonna cut into battery lifetime.
pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online 6 months ago
Please remove your suggestion for buying 18650s on Amazon. They are full of counterfeit cells, or rewrapped cells with dangerously inflated specs.
Get lithium cells from a reputable vendor that tests the batches they receive. Illumn and IMR Batteries are two such vendors.
huginn@feddit.it 6 months ago
Thanks for the clarification on reputable vendors! I’ve always wondered where the right place to buy lithium was.
skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl 6 months ago
tal@lemmy.today 6 months ago
I mean, there are plenty of devices with them out there. !flashlight@lemmy.world seems to only really be interested in lithium-battery-driven flashlights. I don’t think that an 18650 is intrinsically unsafe.
My understanding is that you can get (slightly cheaper) unregulated cells, but that normally, for end users, one uses regulated cells. The electronics on each cell aren’t smart enough to do things like measure and report charged capacity, but they should be adequate to avoid fires if the battery is shorted.
And there’s no standard for a “smarter” battery pack that would do things like report more information.
Yeah, that’s true – some games are going to be GPU-constrained, and the instruction set isn’t gonna be a factor there.
A significant chunk of what I’m getting at, though, is battery life. Like, my understanding is that Apple’s got somewhat-better compute-per-watt-hour ratings on their ARM laptops than x86 laptops do. But having that is contingent on one running native ARM software, not running emulated x86 software. Apple can say “we’re just gonna break compatibility”, and put down enormous pressure on app vendors to do so because they own the whole ecosystem. They have done multiple instruction set switches across architectures (680x0 to PowerPC to x86 to ARM) and that ability to force switches is something that they clearly feel is important to leverage.
For people who are only gonna run open-source Linux software – and this thing is shipping with Debian, which has a native ARM distribution – then it is possible that you can do this, because for open-source software
But Windows can’t do this, because there’s a huge amount of binary software that will never be retargeted for ARM. You’re going to be burning up your battery life in translation overhead. And you can’t do it with Linux if you want to run binary-only software – often Windows software – which is what Steam distributes. That library of software is just never gonna be translated; some of it probably doesn’t even have the source around anywhere. I don’t even know if Steam in 2024 has a native way to distribute ARM binaries (though I assume that one could have the game handle the target and running appropriate code).
huginn@feddit.it 6 months ago
Kalih Choc are great. I like that plan.
stoy@lemmy.zip 6 months ago
Is is arm, and they charge a leg for it
sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al 6 months ago
RK suggests RockChip, which is likely to be ARM. But I haven’t watched the video yet.