2020-11-17: Why I'm Not Buying An Arm Laptop xkp =========================================================== Earlier this year the Pinebook Pro came out. What's not to love about a mostly open sub-$200 laptop that's good enough for most lightweight needs? I was very interested in the Pinebook but as always with these things I have laptops already. Apple have announced their first ARM Macbooks. MacOS is terrible, and I'm not interested in something as closed as a Macbook running on the same kind of hardware as Apple's locked down products. Hard pass. The MNT Reform is out any day now. I *really* like the Reform. It ticks almost all my boxes for a sustainable device. The 4Gb of RAM is a bit of a letdown, but overall it's a product I could get very excited about. I'm not buying a Reform. That's not an indictment of MNT or the product - I would definitely buy one if I was in the market for a new laptop. And therein lies the rub. A 'new' laptop. I recently upgraded from a 2014 Macbook Pro running MacOS Mojave (I can't Catalina, let alone Big Sur) to a 2012 Lenovo Thinkpad X230 running OpenBSD. It runs an entirely open BIOS (Seabios), an entirely open OS (OpenBSD) and it's completely repairable and maintainable. Among other upgrades on the device are an X220 keyboard, an IPS screen, 16Gb of RAM, A 120Gb Boot SSD and 480Gb mSATA home drive and an Atheros wifi chipset. I have to say the thing that made the biggest difference was the IPS screen upgrade. The TN display was painful to use but the IPS screen has changed everything. I'm not bothered about the resolution, I don't generally use anything higher than HD except on the MBP. I still have the Mac hanging around and will still use it for certain tasks but the X230 does everything I need, does it respecting my privacy and does it without buying a new laptop. This laptop should last way into the late 2020s. When it comes to replacing it, I'll probably buy a used laptop from around this year or earlier. I bought a new subnotebook this year to do Windows-based Satcom and RF stuff. It's the only portable Windows device I have and I'm pretty happy with it, but I feel bad for buying a 'new' device. I'm having a real quandry on the one hand wanting to build new electronic devices, but on the other feeling guilty about adding to the landfill problem. My subnotebook isn't really repairable either, unlike the X230. It seems that in learning more about the environment, Solarpunk and building the future I want, I know I don't want to be part of the problem anymore.