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TacticalCoderyesterday at 11:06 PM1 replyview on HN

> I wish there were a Linux machine with the hardware quality of a MacBook

It really depends what you mean by "quality". To me first and foremost quality I look for in a laptop is for it to not break. As I'm a heavy desktop user, my laptop is typically with me on the couch or on vacation. Enter my MacBook Air M1: after 13 months, and sadly no extended warranty, the screen broke for no reason overnight. I literally closed it before going to bed and when I opened the lid the next day: screen broken. Some refer to that phenomenon as the "bendgate".

And every time I see a Mac laptop I can't help but think "slick and good looking but brittle". There's a feeling of brittleness with Mac laptops that you don't have with, say, a Thinkpad.

My absolute best laptop is a MIL-SPEC (I know, I know, there are many different types of military specs) LG Gram. Lighter than a MacBook too. And every single time I demo it to people I take the screen, I bent it left and right. This thing is rock solid.

I happen to have this laptop (not my vid) and look at 34 seconds in the vid:

https://youtu.be/herYV5TJ_m8

The guy literally throws my laptop (well, the same) down concrete stairs and the thing still just works fine.

The friend who sold it to me (I bought it used) one day stepped on it when he woke up. No problemo.

To me that is quality: something you can buy used and that is rock solid.

Where are the vids of someone throwing a MacBook Air down the stairs and the thing keeps working?

I'm trading a retina display any day for a display that doesn't break when it accidentally falls on the ground.

Now I love the look and the incredible speed of the MacBook Air laptops (I still have my M1 but has its screen broke, I turned it into a desktop) but I really wish they were not desk queens: we've got desktops for that.

I don't want a laptop that require exceptional care and mad packaging skills when putting it inside a backpack (and which then requires the backpack to be manipulated with extreme care).

So: bring me the raw power and why not the nice look of a MacBook Air, but make it sturdy (really the most important for me) and have it support Linux. That I'd buy.


Replies

zdragnaryesterday at 11:57 PM

I've owned two LG gram laptops. Neither were milspec, but both were really nice. Sure, the screen quality isn't going to win any awards, nor will the speakers, but the light weight, fantastic battery life and snappy performance always get a recommendation from me.