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Timecodes:
00:00 Intro
00:33 Sponsor: SquareSpace
01:39 Assembly
06:05 Linux Compatibility
08:49 Performance & Battery Life
11:35 Hardware quality
17:17 Parting Thoughts
18:40 Support the channel
So, I decided to install Linux on that thing. Since Fedora 41was just released, I decided to go for that, with the beta to be precise, it wasnāt officially out when I started making this video.
I decided to just apply the basic updates to the distro, and not even look at firmware updates first, just to see if everything worked properly, and I wasnāt disappointed. Wifi and bluetooth work fine, the keyboard backlight is supported, the touchpad is able to perform these smooth GNOME gestures, the keyboard works perfectly, suspend and resume as well, thereās nothing to add or configure, which is nice., and itās really not always the case with laptops primarily meant to work with Windows.
This is all on Fedora 41, with the linux kernel 6.11, so not even the very latest. The camera, mic, and speakers also perform well, although as always, the micās default volume is wayyy to high for a laptop mic and needs to be lowered by about half. Even the fingerprint reader located in the power button works perfectly, although registering a fingerprint is finicky. It even works from the terminal, which is cool. Hot swapping the ports fro the laptopās body also works fine, everything is just fully functional.
As per the CPU itself, itās a Ryzen 7 7840U, so not the very latest and greatest from AMD, but itās a very competent CPU nonetheless, with 8 cores and 16 threads. On Geekbench 6, it got 2570 in single core, and 11270 in multi core.
As per battery life, the framework 13 isnāt a big champion, it only has a 61 Wh battery with aht specific AMD CPU. For me, resulted in about 8h of looped video playback on youtube, with hardware acceleration enabled in Firefox, over wifi, at mid brightness, on power saver mode, with a 2880Ć1920 display running at 120hz, with 150% fractional scaling.
As per the actual laptopās hardware, itās great. The build quality is good, and absolute proof that you donāt need to sacrifice repairability and maintenance options to get a well built device. It doesnāt really flex much apart from the middle of the keyboard, and it feels very rigid and solid, despite that fact that various plates can be unscrewed and removed.
Aesthetically, there is not much of a tradeoff ether, apart from the ports which look weirdly far apart from one another because, well, they have to to make this module thing work, but itās honestly not a big deal, it looks fine, and at least you donāt bump multiple peripherals into one another, and you donāt block ports, with a big USB drive.
The plastic bezel is fine as well, the branding is very minimal, it all looks good. I enjoyedn the screen, itās bright, colors are good and it has an anti glare coating. It goes up to 500 nits, and covers 100% of sRGB. itās also 3:2, which i like as an aspect ratio. It can go up to 120hz as well,but thatās only for the 2880Ć1920 display I got i my review unit.
The keyboard and touchpad are great as well, among the best laptop keyboards Iāve used. Keys are stable, correctly sized, and have good travel, they feel really nice to type on. The touchpad is smooth glass, it works perfectly for touchpad gestures, and itāws precise not fiddly at all. Itās also centered, which is good.
Other nice things include the mic and camera privacy switches that will stop them from being used electrically.
As per the cost, itās more expensive. With everything I got in the box, the review unit costs 1748 euros, with the 20% VAT included. But, with the framework laptop, you are almost guaranteed to get just a new motherboard when you need it, and you donāt need to buy an entire new laptop every 5 years, which might save some money in the long term.
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