• 2 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 11th, 2023

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  • Avoid lenovo. Their build quality went to crap and they’re easily the least repairable laptop on the market these days.

    I’ve had to repair 4 lenovos within the last few years. Cheap parts and the laptops all had their keyboards plastic rivited to the top shell of the chassis, making it impossible to replace without buying a new chassis. One of the laptops had to have two motherboard replacements before it was usable.

    Their all-in-one doesn’t have a frame around the LCD panel, and they didn’t put access doors in the back panel. So if you want to upgrade the ram or ssd you have a 70% chance of breaking the screen.















  • New thinkpads are trash unfortunately. Lenovo really cheaped out on their build quality. I’ve had to fix multiple lenovo laptops and one of their all-in-ones and the corners they cut made the repairs either impossible or extremely difficult.

    One new ideapad had to go back to them twice with motherboard issues.

    Replacing the keyboard is impossible, you need to replace the whole front panel of the case becuase the keyboard is plastic rivited in place.

    The all-in-one started as a simple ram and storage upgrade, but in order to do that the whole back panel needs to come off. Its snapped on but the LCD panel itself doesn’t have any subframe around it, so when opening the back panel theres a very high chance of you cracking the display.


  • carzian@lemmy.mltoLinux@lemmy.ml*Permanently Deleted*
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    6 months ago

    New thinkpads are trash unfortunately. Lenovo really cheaped out on their build quality. I’ve had to fix multiple lenovo laptops and one of their all-in-ones and the corners they cut made the repairs either impossible or extremely difficult.

    One new ideapad had to go back to them twice with motherboard issues.

    Replacing the keyboard is impossible, you need to replace the whole front panel of the case becuase the keyboard is plastic rivited in place.

    The all-in-one started as a simple ram and storage upgrade, but in order to do that the whole back panel needs to come off. Its snapped on but the LCD panel itself doesn’t have any subframe around it, so when opening the back panel theres a very high chance of you cracking the display.




  • But we know based on OPs usage requirements, he’s not one of those people doing everything in the browser.

    Updates are important regardless of fomo. They’re not only for adding new features, they’re for fixing bugs and improving stability and these changes rarely get backported unless their critical.

    The core Debian might be stable, but, for example, plasma 6.3 is much more stable than 5.27

    Debian is stable and will work, but there are other options that are basically as stable and have much newer packages - improving desktop stability and user experience


  • Debian 12.9 was released a few months ago based on kernel 6.1 LTS, the latest kernel is 6.13, with 6.12 being the new LTS.

    Debian packages are updated for bug fixes and security updates, but they generally don’t update to new versions.

    If you’re running KDE Debian, your version is plasma 5.27, meanwhile 6.3 was just released.

    There are a massive amount of quality of life improvements that debain 12 stable will never get. Sure you can backport some, but then it’s not really debain stable is it?

    Meanwhile there are plenty of other distros that are almost just as stable, but have newer versions of everything. Not to mention the stability improvements of the newer software (one example is plasma 6.3 is a massive improvement over 5.27)

    Like I said, I love Debian, but if you’re doing daily driving of the computer, I think there are better alternatives