The touchpad is one of the best in any PC notebook, but then again, most PC touchpads are shamelessly bad, specially with gestures more complicated than a 2 finger scroll. For 99% of the people I believe it's fairly good, but not so much for really fast touch-typists. The keyboard, as with most PCs, is mediocre, plastic-y, a little bit wobbly, with good enough travel but with a sudden hard click without enough resistence. Dell really did a pretty good job this time around. Out of all the early-2016 machines that most Linux distros can support reasonably well, I believe the Dell XPS series, Lenovo Thinkpad X1 Yoga, and possibly Asus Zenbook Pro and HP ProBook are quite good nowadays.īut in most categories, the XPS series is the one to beat. As a rule of thumb, do not buy on day 1, wait at the very least 3 months. Even first generation Macbook models usually present trouble. If you really want to buy one of the 2017 brand new Kaby Lake models, you're in a russian roulette situation. Let the Windows guys suffer the first couple of months give Dell, NVIDIA and Intel time to fix the mess releasing more stable BIOS firmware and drivers. Here's the first protip: avoid super brand new models, most of them won't have stable drivers even for Windows 10, let alone Linux. The PC/Windows world is a lot better it's still plagued with unstable BIOS, unstable drivers, etc. To this day, nothing can beat the software+hardware cohesiveness of Apple.
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